
A token is a digital representation of value within a blockchain ecosystem.
Tokens are on-chain digital units that can be issued, transferred, and burned, with all actions permanently recorded on the blockchain. They can represent value, access rights, or ownership interests. You can think of tokens as verifiable “points” tracked and authenticated across the internet.
Tokens serve far more than just “payment” functions. Many projects use tokens for governance voting, membership access, discounts, or reward points. Some tokens are pegged to real-world assets and represent claims on yield from liquidity pools.
The most common types include: stablecoins (tokens with relatively stable prices), utility tokens (used for product access or rewards), and NFTs (non-fungible tokens representing unique items). Governance tokens typically grant voting rights for project parameters and treasury allocations.
Tokens are the universal gateway to Web3.
Whether you’re making payments, transferring assets, participating in governance votes, or unlocking in-game features, tokens serve as the standard “language” for interaction. Understanding tokens means knowing how to operate on-chain and record your assets.
For investors, tokens are vehicles for yield generation and risk management. For developers, tokens are tools for distributing permissions, incentivizing users, and raising capital. For everyday users, tokens are tickets—needed to access exchanges, DeFi applications, or member communities.
Token issuance and transfers are managed by smart contracts.
A smart contract is an automatically executed program deployed on the blockchain that defines a token’s name, precision, total supply, and transfer rules. When a user initiates a transaction, the smart contract updates on-chain balances according to set rules.
Token issuance typically involves “minting” (increasing supply) and “burning” (reducing supply), both of which are executed via smart contract functions and recorded on-chain. Many projects restrict these functions so only specific roles can mint or adjust parameters.
Accounts are represented by addresses—unique identifiers for blockchain accounts. Transferring tokens means debiting a certain amount from your address and crediting it to another, while also paying network gas fees.
Some tokens follow widely adopted standards that define interfaces for transfers, approvals, balance queries, and more. This makes wallet and exchange integration seamless. These standards aren’t academic jargon—they’re simply “agreed-upon sets of interfaces everyone follows.”
Tokens play core roles in payments, governance, rewards, and more.
On exchanges, stablecoins often act as “base currencies” for trading other tokens—for example, selecting token pairs like TOKEN/USDT in Gate’s spot market to buy, sell, or manage funds.
For rewards and incentives, projects distribute tokens to contributors. For instance, in Gate’s liquidity mining pools, users deposit assets into designated pools and receive platform token rewards according to pool rules; annual yields vary with pool and market conditions.
In governance scenarios, holding governance tokens allows participation in project votes to decide parameters or budget allocations. Voting is typically weighted by token holdings, with both process and results transparently recorded on-chain.
In DeFi applications, tokens serve as core assets for lending and collateral. Users deposit tokens into lending protocols to earn interest or use them as collateral to borrow stablecoins and participate in other activities—all executed via smart contracts without manual approval.
In NFT and membership scenarios, NFTs act as unique “tickets” that unlock content, events, or exclusive discounts; utility tokens work like universal points for paying fees or accessing platform benefits.
You can acquire tokens through exchanges or on-chain platforms.
Step 1: Register an account on Gate and complete identity verification. This enables fiat deposits and higher withdrawal limits.
Step 2: Deposit funds or buy stablecoins. Purchase USDT or similar stablecoins via fiat channels, or deposit funds using bank cards/transfers so your account holds tradable base currencies.
Step 3: Go to the spot market and select your desired trading pair (e.g., TOKEN/USDT). Place a limit or market order—upon execution, the tokens will appear in your account.
Step 4: Consider self-custody and security. To hold assets yourself, withdraw tokens to your personal wallet. Self-custody wallets allow you to manage your own private keys—these can be browser extensions or hardware devices.
Step 5: For on-chain purchases, connect your wallet to a decentralized exchange (DEX), select the token using the official contract address, set slippage and amount parameters, confirm the transaction, and wait for on-chain confirmation. Always verify contract addresses from the project’s official site or reputable sources to avoid counterfeit tokens.
Token market structure continues to evolve this year.
Stablecoins have seen significant growth in size and market share. According to public aggregated data, stablecoin market capitalization reached approximately $200–$210 billion in Q3 2025—an increase from 2024. In many trading pairs, stablecoins now account for over 40% of trading volume—driven by demand for stable liquidity from payments, hedging strategies, and institutional adoption.
Tokens related to real-world asset tokenization (RWA) are growing rapidly. As reported by platforms like DeFiLlama, total value locked (TVL) in RWA protocols doubled from around $6 billion to $12 billion over the past year (2025), fueled mainly by yield-bearing assets and tokenized treasury products. These offer transparent settlement and near-instant liquidity—making them increasingly attractive.
Decentralized trading and Layer 2 networks are driving activity in new tokens. In the last six months of 2025, trading volume on major Layer 2s kept rising; Ethereum and Layer 2 networks together saw over 200,000 new general token contracts created (though exact numbers vary by data source). Lower transaction fees and faster confirmations encourage smaller projects to launch directly on-chain before expanding to exchanges.
Airdrops and user incentive campaigns remain sizable. In the past year (2025), many projects distributed billions of dollars’ worth of tokens via tasks and participation-based airdrops; however, there is a growing focus on rewarding “genuine usage” while preventing Sybil attacks—improving allocation efficiency.
Compared with 2024’s focus on infrastructure and steady growth, 2025 has seen faster token launches and iterations in RWA and AI-driven sectors—enabled by lower costs, expanding use cases, and increased institutional participation.
Many misconceptions stem from equating tokens with stocks.
Tokens do not represent equity. Even if they offer governance rights, this does not guarantee legal dividends or liquidation preference. Treating tokens like “company shares” leads to faulty valuations and risk assessments.
“Cheap” does not mean valuable. Many tokens have low unit prices due to decimal settings; true value depends on total supply, circulating ratio, and demand. Focus on liquidity and real utility—not just nominal price.
Airdrops are not guaranteed profit. Participating in airdrops often requires completing tasks or transactions that incur fees and time costs—and may involve compliance or tax considerations. Bulk registrations can also result in disqualification from rewards.
Ignoring contract permissions is risky. Some token contracts retain minting, freezing, or parameter-changing rights—if there’s no clear documentation or multisig management, risk is elevated. Always review official documentation and audit reports.
Fake tokens and wrong contract addresses pose major threats. On exchanges, check token labels and announcements; on-chain, always copy contract addresses from official sources and double-check in your wallet to avoid confusion with counterfeit tokens.
Low liquidity can cause slippage and execution challenges. Large trades in small pools may move prices significantly off expectations; splitting trades, setting limit orders, and monitoring market depth help mitigate impact.
A token is any digital asset issued on a blockchain; a cryptocurrency refers specifically to tokens with currency-like functions (e.g., BTC, ETH). In short: all cryptocurrencies are tokens—but not all tokens are cryptocurrencies. Some represent project rights or utilities without monetary characteristics.
A contract address is the unique identifier of a token on its blockchain—similar to a bank account number. With the contract address, you can verify authenticity, circulating supply, holder data, and more—it’s essential for transfers and trades. Always confirm the contract address before trading on Gate or any exchange to avoid counterfeit coins.
Token benefits vary by project but commonly include: voting rights (for governance decisions), dividend rights (profit distribution), functional privileges (discounts or priority access to services). Each token’s rights design is different—always understand a project’s benefit structure before purchasing its token.
Evaluate three core aspects: team background (do key members have relevant experience?), whitepaper quality (is the technical roadmap clear and feasible?), community engagement (is official communication transparent—is there active discussion?). Also review audit reports and contract security assessments; tokens listed on regulated platforms like Gate typically undergo basic screening.
The token market is still nascent—with limited liquidity and participants mainly being speculators rather than end-users—which makes prices highly sensitive to news. Market sentiment shifts, policy changes, or large trades can quickly drive price swings. Beginners should start with small amounts and never invest more than they can afford to lose.


