The 80% Plunge in Gas Fees: Is It All Due to Miners Dumping?

By: blockbeats|2026/01/19 08:00:01
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Original Title: "Focused on Work but Became the Excuse for Price Drops? The Irony Behind Gas Cold Shoulder"
Original Author: KarenZ, Foresight News

These past few days on social media, it's hard not to have your feed flooded with BAGS.

The buzz around BAGS is not only due to the frenzy of on-chain players rushing in but also stems from an explosive article — programmer Steve Yegge's lengthy piece titled "Bags and the Creator Economy," published on January 15, which details his journey with BAGS from "skepticism" to "euphoria."

When a Tech Geek Encounters a Windfall

The article's author, Steve Yegge, has quite the background. This individual, with 40 years of coding experience, having worked at tech giants like Amazon, Google, Grab, is known for his sharp critiques of platform architecture and his extreme engineering mindset.

The plot here is quite intriguing:

1. Suspected Fraud: Steve Yegge received a message on LinkedIn, saying someone was sending him money (initially $49,000), and mentioned that developer Geoffrey Huntley had just received $56,000 the previous week. His wife said it was a scam, his gut told him it was a scheme, but he still went for it.

2. The Real Deal: The money actually arrived! This made him realize that BAGS might not be a simple rug pull but a paradigm shift in the creator economy.

Steve Yegge points out, "BAGS is a market that fuels creativity, where people are trying to predict and support the future winners. These creators can be individuals or small teams, and they are creating amazing things. As we step into 2026, with tools like Gas Town, individual creators will be able to produce products comparable to those of large corporations."

When such a "tech geek" earnestly analyzes a Web3 product, it briefly dawns on the market that BagsApp may not just be about Meme frenzy but rather a fundamental overhaul of the creator economy. Many believe he represents Silicon Valley's most hardcore and pragmatic engineering mindset.

So How Does BAGS Work?

BAGS is a token launch and trading platform on Solana that utilizes Meteora. What sets it apart from most launch platforms is that creators can specify who receives the transaction royalties when the token is launched. The current default token transaction fee on BAGS is 1%.

This represents a new opportunity for the Web2 developer community. Even if they don't create or hold the token, as long as the token has transaction volume, they can earn continuous passive income.

Whether individuals create their own token with a self-set royalty or communities mint tokens for favored developers and specify their wallet or Twitter to receive royalties, it lowers the barrier for creators to monetize.

In addition, BAGS also features a dividend function where token creators can enable a fee-sharing mechanism that rewards a portion of the transaction revenue to top holders based on their holdings. The system checks every 24 hours, and if unclaimed earnings exceed 10 SOL, they are automatically distributed among the top 100 holders based on their ownership ratio.

Furthermore, holding the token grants chat permissions in the currency's community, achieving a native integration of finance and social interaction.

From another perspective, BAGS has created a highly deceptive form of "gentleness": even if you don't create a token, as long as you have influence, the community can forcibly send you money.

However, this also brings about a paradox: when a developer can benefit from "passive royalties," do they still have the motivation to complete those mundane, lengthy, and potentially failing technical deliveries?

BAGS Ecosystem Top Meme

The top two meme-based tokens in the BAGS ecosystem by market cap are:

RALPH (Current Market Cap $29 million)

Paying homage to the AI programming circles' "Ralph Wiggum Technique" (i.e., using AI to iterate repeatedly until the code runs). This community-created token is a meme of a development culture. Geoffrey Huntley did not deploy this smart contract.

Gas (Current Market Cap $9.24 million)

Gas originates from Steve Yegge's release of the AI coding agent orchestrator Gas Town. On January 2, 2026, Steve Yegge released the coding agent orchestrator Gas Town, a tool that manages multiple AI coding agents simultaneously. Gas Town plans to expand this year in three areas: 1. model awareness; 2. enhancing agents' compatibility with Gas Town; 3. Gas Town and Beads datasets being incorporated into cutting-edge model training corpora. The Gas token was minted autonomously by the community.

What's more, of the $270,000 transaction fee generated by the Gas token, 99% flowed back to Steve Yegge himself, forming a seemingly perfect closed loop of "Developer Focus on Building, Community Continuous Empowerment."

When "Focus on Development" Becomes a Bearish Sign

However, the reality is that when Steve Yegge stated on January 17 that he would "return to development, fully dedicate himself to Gas Town, and cannot spend too much time on CT," the community's enthusiasm instantly cooled off. Gas reached its all-time high market cap of $60 million on January 16, and as of the time of writing, it had dropped over 83% from the peak.

This contradiction precisely confirms a harsh reality: the market never saw Gas as a true AI product but rather as the next AI meme hype target.

When "Focus on Development" instead becomes a bearish factor for the token price, we must acknowledge that the current Web3 AI track is still a PVP battlefield dominated by the attention economy.

Gas's embarrassing situation reveals the deepest structural contradiction of Web3: the speed of capital flow is in seconds (transactions), while the speed of building high-quality products is at a snail's pace (months or even years).

In Steve Yegge's case, the market gave him money essentially to buy his future "expectation." However, the crypto market is too impatient; it demands money invested in one second to have a "positive" impact the next second. When developers choose to seclude themselves to fulfill their promises, they effectively cut off the "emotional liquidity" that speculators need the most. Yet, true code writing requires long periods of silence and deep work.

Everyone wants a Builder's story to support the valuation but is unwilling to wait for the Builder's long process of technical accumulation. When the novelty of the story fades, when the founder no longer cooperates with growth hacking, the token will revert to its speculative nature.

Conclusion

Is BAGS the future of the creator economy? Perhaps. But for now, it seems more like a ticket for Web2 developers to participate in "attention farming" passively.

Web2 developers are used to being responsible for the codebase, while Web3 forces them to be accountable to the market cap. When Steve Yegge wants to return to the engineer's essence, the market punishes his "inaction." This may be the biggest warning BAGS leaves for the industry: if we only learn how to "financialize" people but not how to protect their "creativity," all we will get is empty shells squeezed of traffic, not a true technological revolution.

When the market begins to appreciate the Builder's long slog in the codebase rather than just focusing on the momentary pump on the chart, that's when the spring of "long-termism" belonging to tech geeks truly arrives.

Do Your Own Research (DYOR) becomes particularly important in this game of technology and memes.

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