SKR builder strategy

Seeker Developer Airdrop Guide: SKR Plan, Tokenomics, and Season 1

Season 1 SKR claims are over, but the airdrop allocation and builder programs still matter. This page explains the official SKR tokenomics, what happened in Season 1, and how developers can build credible Seeker apps for future ecosystem incentives.

Season 1 Status: Closed, Not Currently Farmable

The first SKR claim window opened with the SKR launch and gave eligible users 90 days to claim through Seed Vault Wallet on Seeker. Solana Mobile's launch post said unclaimed SKR would return to the airdrops pool after April 20, 2026. As of July 3, 2026, Season 1 should be treated as closed, not as an active airdrop to chase.

Solana Mobile later posted that Season 1 claims wrapped with 89.7% claimed and about 200 million SKR returning to the future airdrops pool. That matters for builders because future distributions are likely to reward real ecosystem activity, not thin or misleading apps.

SKR Tokenomics for Builders

Official SKR tokenomics list a 10 billion SKR total supply. The published distribution assigns 30% to airdrops, 25% to growth and partnerships, 10% to the community treasury, 15% to Solana Mobile, 10% to Solana Labs, and 10% to liquidity and launch. The official SKR page also describes staking through Guardians and inflation that starts at 10% in year one, decays annually, and settles toward a 2% terminal rate.

For developers, the important signal is not just the Season 1 claim. The token design points toward ongoing user, builder, staking, governance, and ecosystem participation incentives. A Seeker app should therefore have a real mobile use case, clear wallet behavior, and a reason for users to return.

Developer Airdrop Plan: What to Build Next

A credible Seeker developer airdrop plan should focus on app quality and measurable utility rather than farming language. Solana Mobile's builder grant messaging asks for mobile-first apps that integrate SKR, use the Solana Mobile Stack, and activate the Seeker user base. That is the safer direction for founders: ship something useful, publish it professionally, and build activity that would make sense if future rewards include app usage, installs, or ecosystem contribution.

  • Build an app that solves one real mobile-first Seeker use case.
  • Use wallet connection intentionally instead of adding Web3 for decoration.
  • Create clear store metadata, screenshots, privacy policy, and terms.
  • Avoid claiming guaranteed SKR rewards, guaranteed approval, or insider access.
  • Track user activity and feedback so the app can improve before future seasons.

App Ideas That Fit SKR Incentives

The best SKR-oriented apps are not generic token dashboards. They are apps where a Seeker user has a reason to open the phone, connect a wallet, and do something useful. Examples include rewards dashboards for token communities, NFT holder access tools, referral or quest apps, mobile DeFi status pages, and SKR-aware community engagement tools.

How We Help

We build Seeker-ready dApps for founders who want the app, APK, wallet flow, store assets, landing page, privacy policy, and terms delivered together. For SKR-focused projects, we can shape the app around a legitimate builder strategy: clear utility, compliant wording, mobile-first UX, and launch materials that do not overpromise rewards.

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