A curated list of awesome resources for Cryptoeconomics research, covering game theory, mechanism design, consensus, and token engineering.
Awesome Cryptoeconomics is a curated, open-source list of educational and research materials focused on the field of cryptoeconomics. It aggregates articles, videos, whitepapers, and other resources that explain how economic incentives, game theory, and cryptographic principles combine to secure and govern decentralized systems like blockchains. It solves the problem of information fragmentation by providing a single, organized starting point for anyone studying this interdisciplinary domain.
Blockchain researchers, protocol designers, token engineers, economics students, and developers seeking a deep understanding of the economic models and incentive structures that underpin cryptocurrency and decentralized network design.
Developers and researchers choose this resource because it offers a vast, community-vetted, and well-structured compilation that is constantly updated. It saves significant time compared to scattered searches and provides authoritative materials from leading figures and institutions in the space.
An awesome curated list of Cryptoeconomic research and learning materials
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Resources are meticulously organized into categories like Game Theory, Consensus Mechanisms, and Token Engineering, as shown in the detailed table of contents, making navigation efficient for targeted learning.
Includes diverse media such as articles, videos, podcasts, and whitepapers from foundational to advanced topics, evidenced by sections like Introductory Articles and Case Studies on hacks.
Actively welcomes contributions via pull requests, with clear contribution guidelines, ensuring the list stays current with the evolving cryptoeconomics landscape.
Offers materials for all levels, from beginner-friendly articles to deep technical research, facilitating progressive exploration as seen in the Introductory and Advanced sections.
It's solely a curated collection of links without interactive tools, original content, or hands-on exercises, limiting practical application for active learners.
Relies on external resources that can become outdated or inaccessible over time, and community contributions may introduce inconsistent quality without rigorous vetting.
The vast number of links—over 200 entries across multiple categories—lacks prioritization or difficulty ratings, making it hard for beginners to know where to start effectively.