【Blockchain Rhythm】Zama officially announced on January 20th that its token staking portal is now live. For all users who participated in the public offering, they can start staking immediately after receiving tokens from February 2nd, without waiting.
The core logic of this staking system is quite interesting—each operator must lock in ZAMA tokens to join the protocol operation, and then earn rewards based on their staked amount. How are the rewards divided? First, by node type, into two main roles: FHE nodes and KMS nodes. Then, within each role, rewards are allocated proportionally based on the square root of each operator’s staked amount.
The specific profit distribution is as follows: FHE nodes receive 40% of the total rewards, while KMS nodes take the remaining 60%. But don’t see this ratio as fixed—officially, it’s clarified that this ratio will be dynamically adjusted based on the actual infrastructure costs incurred by the two types of nodes. In other words, the side with higher costs will receive a larger share of the rewards. This design ensures the sustainability of the entire ecosystem’s incentives.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
7 Likes
Reward
7
6
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
SighingCashier
· 39m ago
Staking again? This time, the square root allocation seems to be trying something new. Giving 60% to KMS—I really want to see how the actual costs are adjusted.
View OriginalReply0
GasWhisperer
· 15h ago
square root weighting is lowkey genius... means early stakers don't get absolutely decimated by whales. 60/40 split favoring KMS nodes tho? watching those infrastructure costs like a hawk rn, fees always tell the real story
Reply0
SignatureLiquidator
· 15h ago
The square root allocation trick is still somewhat interesting, but it depends on whether the KMS nodes will be dumped...
View OriginalReply0
SatoshiChallenger
· 15h ago
Interestingly, the set of square root allocations... data speaks for itself. The last project that used this method for staking users didn't even wait for the second adjustment before running away.
View OriginalReply0
BankruptcyArtist
· 15h ago
The square root distribution method is quite interesting; it feels like it's designed to prevent large players from monopolizing.
View OriginalReply0
LightningLady
· 15h ago
The square root allocation trick is quite innovative, but whether it can truly make money depends on how the infrastructure costs fluctuate.
Zama Token Staking Portal Launches: A Detailed Explanation of Reward Distribution Rules for Two Types of Nodes
【Blockchain Rhythm】Zama officially announced on January 20th that its token staking portal is now live. For all users who participated in the public offering, they can start staking immediately after receiving tokens from February 2nd, without waiting.
The core logic of this staking system is quite interesting—each operator must lock in ZAMA tokens to join the protocol operation, and then earn rewards based on their staked amount. How are the rewards divided? First, by node type, into two main roles: FHE nodes and KMS nodes. Then, within each role, rewards are allocated proportionally based on the square root of each operator’s staked amount.
The specific profit distribution is as follows: FHE nodes receive 40% of the total rewards, while KMS nodes take the remaining 60%. But don’t see this ratio as fixed—officially, it’s clarified that this ratio will be dynamically adjusted based on the actual infrastructure costs incurred by the two types of nodes. In other words, the side with higher costs will receive a larger share of the rewards. This design ensures the sustainability of the entire ecosystem’s incentives.