The ecological development of blockchain projects relies on community support, and Dusk's community operation fundamentally differs from ordinary crypto projects—its core users are not speculative retail investors but institutional users, developers, and compliant investors who are value-oriented users. Therefore, Dusk's community operation strategy abandons the "airdrop incentives + topic speculation" model, constructing a community system centered around core user needs with a "value-driven + ecological co-construction" approach to cultivate a highly engaged core user group and enhance the community's long-term activity.

The cultivation of core users is the foundation of community operation. Dusk needs to accurately identify and tier different types of core users. For institutional users, establish an "Institutional User Club" that provides exclusive services and benefits, including regular industry seminars, regulatory policy interpretation meetings, and closed-door meetings on ecological development, allowing institutional users to stay informed about ecological progress and participate in governance decisions. For developer users, establish a "Developer Community" that offers technical support, financial incentives, resource matching, and services such as hosting developer competitions to reward outstanding compliant financial application development projects; build a developer communication platform to promote technology sharing and collaboration. For compliant investors, establish an "Investor Community" that provides transparent project progress disclosures, asset tokenization case analyses, risk alerts, and other content to guide investors to focus on the long-term value of the ecosystem rather than short-term price fluctuations.

The key to enhancing community activity lies in designing valuable community activities to avoid meaningless spamming and hype. For institutional users, hold an 'Asset Tokenization Innovation Case Competition', inviting institutions to share innovative business models based on Dusk, selecting excellent cases and providing rewards to promote experience exchange among institutions. For developer users, hold a 'Module Development Challenge', encouraging developers to create new financial application modules based on a modular architecture to enrich the ecological functional landscape. For investor users, hold an 'Ecological Experience Officer' event, inviting users to participate in testing network experiences, providing feedback on product issues, and offering suggestions for ecological optimization. These activities not only enhance community activity but also provide actual value for ecological development.

In addition, community operations need to establish effective incentive mechanisms to stimulate user participation enthusiasm. The incentive mechanism should not be limited to token rewards but should adopt a composite model of 'tokens + rights': Users who participate in ecological governance voting will receive DUSK token rewards; users who make outstanding contributions to ecological development will be granted the title of 'Ecological Co-builder', enjoying rights such as profit sharing from ecological benefits and priority participation in institutional cooperation. This composite incentive model can inspire users' long-term willingness to participate and cultivate a sense of belonging. The ultimate goal of community operations is to build a self-driven ecological community, allowing users to transition from 'participants' to 'co-builders'. By operating core users in layers, designing valuable community activities, and establishing composite incentive mechanisms, Dusk can create a highly sticky and high-value community system, providing solid support for the long-term development of the ecology. @Dusk #dusk $DUSK