With the popularity in tap-to-earn games, TON has captured the interest of crypto enthusiasts and newcomers. Can it replicate this success in DeFi and take the sector mainstream?
The Open Network (TON) has been one of the breakout successes of 2024. The layer 1 platform has emerged from relative obscurity to occupy a central place in the crypto industry’s mindshare in a little over a year.
Its rapid rise is due in large part to the network’s relationship with Telegram. Unlike other major social media platforms, Telegram has pressed forward on integrating web3 technologies, and has chosen TON as the preferred blockchain platform to build this functionality. The relationship between the two has been a boon for TON, with several gaming applications on the platform reaching millions of users at a pace previously unseen in the crypto space.
The ability to leverage Telegram’s massive distribution puts TON in a unique spot among blockchain platforms in terms of its potential for adoption. We’ve so far only seen glimpses of this potential, with activity to date mostly concentrated in simple so-called “tap-to-earn” games that have struggled to convert explosive early interest into sustained adoption. We’re excited to see this potential actualized as the platform and its ecosystem matures. And we’re particularly interested in seeing whether TON’s distribution advantage can be leveraged to finally help DeFi expand its horizons beyond a niche crypto-native audience and into the mainstream.
Telegram is One of the Most Popular Social Media Apps Worldwide
Source: Statista, Telegram, GSR.
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TON’s Origins and Rise
The TON project started in 2017 as the Telegram Open Network. It was conceived amidst the ICO boom as a way of raising money for and monetizing Telegram, which had to date been self-funded by founder Pavel Durov. The Telegram Open Network was meant to complement Telegram’s chat functionality by adding native payments and other web3 services, including smart contract applications and decentralized storage. By doing so, Telegram sought to emulate the WeChat super-app model by integrating a suite of social and financial services into a single app.
The SEC’s suit occurred just as Telegram was gearing up to launch the mainnet version of the TON network. The team had spent a couple of years developing the blockchain’s technology and had a working testnet. Given the lawsuit, however, Telegram announced they had ceased work on the TON project in May 2020 and transferred development over to the open-source community. Given Telegram’s decision to step away from the project, TON faded from the limelight right around the time that crypto gained renewed attention during DeFi summer in 2020.
Hamster Kombat’s Total Users Rivals the Most Downloaded Games
Source: Hamster Kombat Official X Account, Business of Apps, GSR.
TON has Surpassed Ethereum and Popular L2s in Active Addresses
Source: Artemis, GSR.
Note: While active addresses are an imperfect measure that can be inflated by bot activity, they still provide a useful indicative benchmark.
Mini apps, User Experience, and Virality
While the success of TON apps like Notcoin and Hamster Kombat is in no small part due to the size of Telegram’s user base, the key to their growth is largely driven by how they’ve leveraged the messenger’s distinctive features to develop a simple and intuitive user experience and introduce highly viral mechanics.
A core ingredient driving the popularity of these experiences has been the use of Telegram’s mini-app functionality. Mini apps allow users to access interactive and complex web applications directly from the Telegram app by using a Telegram bot or clicking on a link without having to download a separate application. Users can play games, shop, order food, use financial applications, or do pretty much anything else developers can think of via mini apps.
With mini apps, Telegram has created an app marketplace that enables third-party developers to create their own experiences within the messenger. Developers are given a large canvas to develop web applications leveraging the most widely used and flexible web development tools like Javascript, HTML and CSS. Importantly, mini apps are able to harness Telegram’s overall functionality, such as tapping into users’ social graphs to enable social experiences, content sharing, and app invitations. Mini apps further have the ability to use Telegram’s integrated payment options, including its integration with TON. Given their ease of use and native integration with Telegram’s functionality, mini apps provide a powerful tool for developers to create compelling experiences that can immediately leverage Telegram’s network for distribution and gain access to native payments.
Combined with Telegram’s integrated TON wallet, mini apps offer seamless and approachable crypto user experiences. The integrated wallet natively operates across mini apps, allowing users to circumvent bothersome and often insecure interaction flows like importing a private key into a new embedded wallet or third-party application. Users can skip the process of having to download a separate wallet application and set up a new wallet address. The Telegram wallet works seamlessly with mini apps and only prompts interactions when needed, thus removing points of friction that detract from mini app experiences.
On top of the improved crypto user experience offered by mini apps, their integration with the messenger’s social network creates a ripe environment for viral growth to occur. From within a mini app, users can share mini app invitations and content with their Telegram contacts and groups. Coupled with rewards and incentives, this functionality allows mini apps to quickly spread through Telegram’s user base.
Games like Notcoin, Hamster Kombat, and Catizen have leveraged all of these features to good effect. Onboarding to these applications is extremely straightforward as they can be launched directly from the chat interface. Unlike many crypto apps, these games don’t require an external wallet app or browser extension, nor do they demand that a user purchases a specific token or NFT to begin the game. Within seconds of booting up the application, users can play the game and earn rewards.
These games revolve around performing simple in-game actions like tapping on your smartphone screen to increase one’s overall score. On top of in-game actions, users can accrue points by sharing invitations to the game with their contacts or groups, joining the game’s social channels and liking their social media profiles, completing quests, or even spending crypto. Given that their global game score is usually tied to an eventual token airdrop, users have a monetary incentive to perform all of these actions, which leads to these games spreading like wildfire.
With the official integration of TON into Telegram in late 2023, the stage was set for crypto apps on the blockchain to achieve viral growth. By early 2024, Notcoin adopted the now widely employed formula of using points tied to social sharing, linked with an airdrop, to reach tens of millions of users. Hamster Kombat further perfected the formula and dialed up the viral social sharing mechanics to reach hundreds of millions of users. By combining 1) the simple and intuitive user experiences of mini apps, 2) unintrusive crypto elements via the integrated TON wallet, and 3) viral mechanics, Telegram has created a mechanism for mass user onboarding with few equivalents in crypto.
Mini Apps Enable Fully Programmable Web Experiences Within Telegram
Source: Telegram Docs, GSR.
The TON DeFi Opportunity
We’re excited to see what developers can accomplish with the unique potential that the marriage of Telegram and TON offers for crypto applications. We’re interested in seeing crypto gaming and social applications that expand beyond the growth mechanics that have been used to date and build experiences that capture enduring interest.
While most of the attention around TON has focused on applications in the gaming and social segments, we believe that the TON+Telegram ecosystem also offers great potential for DeFi to finally break beyond its primarily crypto-native audience in what amounts to a massive opportunity that hasn’t received due attention.
DeFi Price Performance has Lagged Since 2022
Source: Artemis, GSR.
There are a myriad of reasons for why DeFi has been unable to achieve higher levels of adoption, which range from problems related to blockchain scalability, security and data protection to challenges around liquidity and capital efficiency, and issues with financial regulation worldwide. Since 2021, teams across the industry have been hard at work moving the space forward, and substantial progress has been made. Despite this progress, however, broad-based adoption remains elusive.
Monthly Active Users Across DEXs Have Only Barely Exceeded 20m
Among the issues that have held DeFi back from broader adoption, it’s worth highlighting the difficult user experience across DeFi apps, and the lack of strong distribution channels. To date, it’s proven difficult to onboard users by having them download unfamiliar apps/browser extensions, visit a confusing sequence of apps and/or websites, onramp via exchanges or separate services, and learn about gas payments and cross-chain bridging. The whole experience is often overwhelming. On the flip side, large web2 platforms that could directly onboard millions of users to web3 have largely either ignored web3 or abandoned related efforts, closing some of the more promising avenues for crypto apps to achieve mass distribution.
With crypto mini apps and the integrated wallet, TON and Telegram have largely solved these issues. Telegram has distribution in spades with its 950 million users, and its native integration with TON sidesteps many of the UX frictions that have plagued DeFi applications. Users don’t need to download separate wallets, or go to a different exchange to purchase assets. Telegram’s wallet includes integrations with on-ramps and a P2P marketplace, enabling the entirety of the experience to occur within a single app. Airdrops tied to games have also put tokens in the hands of a large number of Telegram users, effectively onboarding them into crypto without drawing their attention away from the games that they want to play. Few have done as good a job as Telegram at putting crypto in the hands of many and familiarizing them with the technology.
The importance of distribution for DeFi cannot be overstated. To start, there’s the simple fact that good distribution channels can help DeFi applications reach a greater number of users more easily. Beyond that, it’s essential given the network effects needed to bootstrap many types of financial applications. The utility of payment networks, for example, is closely tied to the number of users in the network since the value such networks provide depends on the ability of users to reach the parties that they want or need to pay. Similarly, network effects help improve the liquidity that is the lifeblood of trading and collateralized lending applications. They help increase counterparties, assets, and trading volumes in any one venue, thus improving price discovery and reducing slippage.
The above points to the high potential that DeFi has on TON. Through Telegram, DeFi applications on TON have a unique opportunity to reach hundreds of millions of users and businesses. This reach further creates a positive feedback loop, allowing applications to build network effects and improve liquidity, thereby greatly boosting the value they provide to users.
Capitalizing on the Opportunity
Tap-to-earn games like Notcoin and Hamster Kombat provide a rough outline for how DeFi on TON can realize its potential. Viral mechanics leveraging rewards for inviting users and contributing liquidity can be an extremely powerful bootstrapping mechanism. Such mechanics mirror the liquidity incentives DeFi protocols have employed to date. However, these types of incentives gain a whole new level of potential to drive growth in the context of a widely adopted, easy-to-use platform like Telegram. Notcoin, Hamster Kombat, and Catizen have done an impressive job of distributing their tokens across a large number of users. DeFi applications could mimic the same approach to establish a large early base of protocol users and liquidity.
Among Memecoins TON Tokens Are Some of the Most Widely Held
Source: Tonviewer, Etherscan, Solscan, Coincarp, GSR.
Implementing functionality in the form of mini apps likewise provides a strict upgrade in the onboarding and user experience for new DeFi users, sparing them from having to deal with a cacophony of apps, wallets, browser extensions and on/off ramps. As tap-to-earn games on TON have done, DeFi apps can delay the introduction of crypto elements upfront, allowing users to participate in fun, gamified activities or an airdrop before having to think about on-ramping fiat, safely storing a seed phrase, or purchasing a specific asset.
The ability to bootstrap a large initial set of users and liquidity makes TON a compelling platform for a multitude of financial use cases.
Leveraging social elements via leaderboards, competitions, copy trading, and the like is another large opportunity for DeFi unique to TON. There’s significant potential for social trading applications and DAOs to leverage Telegram groups. Such functionality could be a perfect fit for angel/venture investment communities similar to existing investment DAOs and echo.xyz. Telegram groups and communities further provide a natural environment for DeFi protocols to grow by incentivizing adoption through targeted rewards and airdrops.
Core DeFi primitives like AMMs, lending/borrowing protocols, and derivatives exchanges can likewise benefit from Telegram’s distribution to quickly gain users and liquidity. Such primitives are starting to grow on TON with the likes of Ston.Fi and DeDust on the AMM front, EVAA in lending, and Storm Trade in derivatives. However, the overall DeFi ecosystem is still somewhat immature compared to ecosystems like Ethereum, Solana, and Cosmos. TON’s DeFi ecosystem can draw inspiration from protocols in the latter ecosystems to build out more sophisticated primitives and functions including concentrated liquidity, trading pool programmability/hooks, modular lending pools, MEV protection features, order book exchanges, intent networks, and restaking, among others.
TON Currently Lags Other Major L1s in DeFi TVL and Trading Volumes
Source: CoinGecko, DeFiLlama, GSR.
Blum is an example of a Telegram-based DeFi app that is successfully following the formula set by mini app games thus far. The project aims to build a one-stop-shop for trading and launching tokens with a simplified user experience and social elements, and with integrated P2P and NFT marketplaces. As the team works to deliver on this functionality, they’ve released a teaser mini app that allows users to collect Blum points by playing a mini game, inviting friends, and completing quests. Blum points are tied to the exchange’s upcoming token airdrop, and the project has teased that they might also be taken into account for other types of rewards.
This approach to generate interest and attention has paid off. Per Telegram data, the Blum bot and mini app currently have 57 million active users. The Blum team still needs to execute on their promised functionality to turn that initial interest into continued usage, but so far they’re off to a strong start. If Blum succeeds in attracting and retaining a strong user base, it could chart a path for other DeFi applications on TON to follow.
Outstanding Challenges
While the vision for DeFi on TON is compelling, there are some challenges the ecosystem will need to confront to fully realize the vision. These challenges include:
1.) Attracting and retaining a strong developer base:
The majority of alt L1s have struggled due to their inability to attract a critical mass of developers to build compelling apps on their ecosystems. EVM-based chains have been an exception, but these have succeeded by allowing Ethereum developers to easily redeploy their EVM-based apps across multiple chains or develop applications using existing Ethereum tooling. Of the alt L1s that have chosen to implement non-EVM execution environments, only Solana has indisputably drawn a critical mass of developers committed to developing on the SVM.
Similar to Solana, TON elected to develop its own bespoke smart contract execution environment, the TON Virtual Machine (TVM). To develop on TON, developers have to master a new programming language, FunC, and familiarize themselves with the particulars of the TVM, like asynchronous messaging between smart contracts (as opposed to the EVM’s atomic cross-contract calls). Many alt L1s have struggled to attract developers to their own bespoke programming frameworks, as the incentives for developers to master a new programming stack are frequently lacking. Solana has modeled the way for how to create a highly engaged, evangelizing developer base. To succeed, TON will have to follow in its footsteps. Initiatives like the EVM-compatible TON Application Chain (TAC), a layer 2 on TON, can also offer promising avenues to grow the developer ecosystem by attracting EVM developers.
2.) Achieving scalability and maintaining uptime:
3.) Ensuring Smart Contract Security:
One of the biggest challenges facing all of DeFi, not just on TON, is ensuring the safety of smart contracts which often secure hundreds of millions if not billions of dollars in value. Exploits in DeFi have been all too frequent to credibly support mainstream financial use cases, although significant progress is being made. There’s only so much core developers can do, given the task of writing safe smart contracts falls to app developers. However, entities like the TON Foundation, TON Society, or others in the ecosystem can support the creation of tooling and a smart contract auditing ecosystem around the TVM and FunC.
4.) Combating Bots and Sybils:
All of crypto confronts the challenge of dealing with artificially inflated user and transaction numbers driven by bots and sybil activity, which aim to maximize value extraction from onchain monetary incentives. We see evidence that the same issue affects TON, with some of the airdrops for tap-to-earn games showing signs of bot activity. Such activity is harmful for the establishment of a healthy DeFi ecosystem as it extracts value without providing much in return, and gives misleading signals to developers regarding where organic usage is actually occurring. TON’s integration with Telegram may provide a promising avenue to fight bot activity as Telegram accounts can be used to filter for real users. Requiring a phone number to have a Telegram account is a start, but that can be circumvented relatively easily. In the end, more effective solutions may require something like proof of humanity and/or proof of liveness technologies.
5.) Addressing Worries of Platform Risk: