- $DOOD token launches on Solana May 9, aiming to power decentralized storytelling through the DreamNet protocol.
- Doodles holders and “New Blood” Solana users can claim $DOOD, representing 43% of the total supply.
- DreamNet seeks to tokenize characters, places, and narratives, creating AI-readable assets within shared fictional universes.
The countdown’s on. The much-anticipated $DOOD token is about to drop on Solana, marking a pivotal moment for the Doodles universe and a broader protocol called DreamNet. But this isn’t just another NFT-linked reward or governance token. No, $DOOD is something bigger — a foundational piece in a new kind of storytelling network that’s all about composable, AI-readable data.
Launching May 9, $DOOD aims to energize the Doodles community with incentives tied to content creation and collaboration. It’s also the first Universe Token on DreamNet, a decentralized framework where every character, place, or concept can be tokenized, tracked, and monetized. The big idea? Transforming user-generated stories into structured data that AI can use to generate new narratives, remix content, and power dynamic, community-owned worlds.
DreamNet — A New Way to Tell Stories
DreamNet isn’t just another blockchain protocol. It’s a framework for turning fictional universes into shared, programmable assets. Think Marvel, Star Wars, or Harry Potter — but instead of a single studio holding all the rights, every character, setting, and plot twist can be tokenized as a community-owned asset.
Each universe on DreamNet gets its own token (like $DOOD), and every contribution — a new character, a fictional city, a story arc — is minted as a discrete token that can be referenced, traded, and monetized. That means creators can generate value not just by selling content but by building pieces of a larger, evolving narrative that others can use.
In that context, $DOOD is more than just a Doodles token. It’s the first test of DreamNet’s broader mission: to build open, AI-compatible story worlds where community members, fans, and developers can collaborate and profit from their contributions.
Claiming $DOOD — How It Works
$DOOD will drop through an airdrop to two main groups: existing Doodles NFT holders and the “New Blood” community on Solana.
- Doodles Holders: Existing collectors can pre-register for the airdrop via dood.doodles.app, linking both Ethereum and Solana wallets. Registration is open until May 9, the official Token Generation Event (TGE). Missed it? Don’t panic. A manual claim window will remain open for 77 days after TGE.
- New Blood: These are Solana-native users who’ve recently interacted with the Doodles ecosystem. They don’t need to register; they’ll get $DOOD automatically when the token goes live.
Together, these groups will receive 43% of the $DOOD supply — 30% to Doodles holders, 13% to New Blood.
Why Solana?
So, why launch on Solana? The Doodles team points to speed and cost-efficiency. With $DOOD designed to support micro-interactions and creative tooling, Solana’s fast, low-fee network makes sense.
But that’s not the endgame. The team plans to bridge $DOOD to Base, an Ethereum Layer 2, as DreamNet scales. The goal? To connect with the broader Ethereum ecosystem while still leveraging Solana’s efficiency for core operations.
Tokenomics — Where the $DOOD Flows
The total supply of $DOOD is capped at 10 billion tokens. The breakdown:
- 30% to Doodles holders via airdrop
- 13% to New Blood and related onboarding
- 25% to the Ecosystem Fund, a reserve for funding contests, grants, and early development
- 32% to the team, advisors, and future reserves
That Ecosystem Fund is crucial. It’s a flexible pool designed to fund “Swarm Events” — coordinated campaigns where agents, creators, and fans can generate content, remix stories, or build new assets tied to the Doodles world. Think collaborative storytelling but with actual financial incentives.

The Bigger Picture
What’s the endgame here? $DOOD isn’t just about Doodles. It’s a test case for DreamNet, a protocol that aims to turn decentralized storytelling into a structured, AI-compatible economy. If it works, other creators could launch their own Universe Tokens, each representing a new fictional world with its own characters, settings, and economic systems.
So, $DOOD isn’t just another token launch — it’s a blueprint for a different kind of franchise, where stories are open systems and content is both data and currency. It’s a wild, experimental bet. But if it pays off, it could redefine how stories get told, who owns them, and how they evolve over time.