Pi Network Launches PiRC1 Token Framework Requiring Real Apps Before Any Token Can Be Issued
Pi Network has introduced PiRC1, a new token issuance framework launched under Protocol 22 on April 22, that bars projects from issuing tokens unless they can first demonstrate a functioning application with real user demand, a direct attempt to filter out speculation-driven launches from the ecosystem.
- Pi Network launched PiRC1 on April 22 under Protocol V22, requiring any project seeking to issue ecosystem tokens to demonstrate a real, functioning application with genuine user demand before launch.
- Token proceeds under PiRC1 are routed to permanent liquidity pools rather than directly to project teams, adding a structural safeguard against misuse of raised funds.
- The framework arrives alongside an April 27 node upgrade deadline for Protocol 22, with full smart contract functionality expected to follow under Protocol 23 in May.
Pi Network launched PiRC1, its Token Design Framework, on April 22 as part of the Protocol V22 upgrade. As HOKANEWS.COM reported, the core principle of PiRC1 is straightforward: only applications that demonstrate genuine use cases and tangible user demand within the Pi ecosystem will be eligible to participate in token issuance. The framework is designed to address one of the crypto industry’s most persistent problems, the proliferation of low-value tokens created primarily as speculative instruments rather than functional components of a real digital economy.
Pi Network PiRC1 Token Issuance Framework Sets a New Standard for Ecosystem Projects
Under PiRC1, no project can launch a token without first having a working application. Token proceeds do not go directly to project teams but are instead routed into permanent liquidity pools, anchored to Pi Coin as the ecosystem’s foundational currency. This design separates fundraising from direct project control, introducing a structural safeguard that prevents teams from pulling liquidity after launch, a pattern that has caused widespread losses across Web3. Pi’s network of KYC-verified users adds an additional accountability layer, since developers and users operate under verified identities rather than anonymously. As crypto.news reported, PiRC1 was released alongside a new PiRC2 document opening the subscription smart contract model to technical review and community feedback. PI traded at approximately $0.1687 as of April 23, with a $1.73 billion market cap and a 24-hour volume of $11.17 million.
How PiRC1 Fits the Broader Protocol Upgrade Roadmap
PiRC1 was introduced under Protocol V22 as a direct follow-on to the V21 and V21.2 network upgrades that strengthened Pi’s infrastructure and prepared it for smart contract readiness. Protocol 22 also carries an urgent node deadline: as crypto.news tracked, Mainnet node operators must upgrade to Protocol 22 by April 27 to remain connected to the network. The next major milestone is Protocol 23, expected in May 2026, which will introduce full smart contract functionality for developers. Together, the PiRC1 token framework and Protocol 23 smart contract tools represent what Pi Network is framing as the transition from a mining-focused network to a structured Web3 ecosystem capable of supporting real commercial applications.
What PiRC1 Means for PI’s Market Position
Pi co-founder Chengdiao Fan first introduced PiRC1 as a proposal in late February, emphasizing that tokens should function as tools within applications rather than as stand-alone financial instruments. The framework’s open review period on GitHub and Google Forms gave the developer community a chance to shape the final design before it launched. As crypto.news documented, PI’s market trajectory in 2026 has been heavily dependent on whether the network’s technical milestones translate into actual on-chain usage. Each prior roadmap release has been treated largely as a sell-the-news event by the market. Whether PiRC1 changes that dynamic will depend on how many developers build functioning applications under the framework and how quickly user engagement on those apps becomes measurable.
Pi Network said it plans to continue expanding the PiRC1 framework with feedback from its developer community, and has flagged Protocol 23 smart contract support as the next major technical deliverable expected in May.