BlockBeats News, October 26th, Roam officially announced the first implementation of the Token Output Difficulty Adjustment Mechanism, which took effect starting from the 20,000th burning cycle. Moving forward, the system will automatically perform a difficulty readjustment every 1,000 cycles (approximately 11.6 days).
According to the project's whitepaper, Roam has drawn inspiration from Bitcoin's difficulty adjustment logic, linking token output to network validation behavior (Check-In) and setting a "hash rate" benchmark every 1,000 cycles for dynamic adjustment. This mechanism aims to synchronize output rhythm with network activity:
1. When validation behavior remains stable, tokens are released according to the original schedule;
2. If market fluctuations lead to a decrease in validation quantity, the system will automatically reduce token output to alleviate market selling pressure and stabilize the token price;
3. Once network activity recovers, even surpassing previous highs, the token release rate will also be correspondingly increased, with a reimbursement for the delayed output due to difficulty adjustments.
As one of the core mechanisms of Roam's price protection system, the difficulty adjustment aims to address the ever-changing market cycles, maintain the long-term stability of the incentive structure, build a dynamically balanced and resilient token economic model, and safeguard the fundamental interests of network builders.




