Hive in 2026: A Small Community, Big Votes, and the Vanishing Veteran

Hive was built on the promise of rewarding contribution, engagement, and trust. Reputation, HP, and KE were designed to reflect consistent effort and long-term commitment. In the early days, climbing reputation wasn’t just difficult—it meant something. It signaled that the community recognized your contribution. Back then, with far more posts and active accounts, patterns in curation were harder to notice. Today, as Hive has become a smaller, tighter-knit community, these patterns are much more visible. Repeated support from certain accounts and the relative under-recognition of veteran contributors now stands out in a way it may not have before. Perhaps this has always been part of the system, but now it’s in plain view.
Some authors repeatedly receive massive votes from big curation accounts, boosting both their earnings and their reputation, while many veteran contributors—people who have invested years in the platform—often see less recognition. This can make long-term contributors feel overlooked, raising questions about how metrics like reputation and reward patterns reflect actual community value.
Big curation accounts are human-driven, and they often specialize in certain communities. Many focus on niches like photography or food, staying within familiar areas where they can have the most influence. Most of these accounts have a large amount of HP delegated to them, which makes their votes extremely powerful. The combination of niche focus and high HP creates patterns where repeated support boosts the visibility, reputation, and earnings of certain authors, while others—often long-term contributors—receive less attention. The metrics themselves—reputation, KE, HP—remain important, but the way rewards are distributed can create perceptions of imbalance.
Some veteran contributors have wondered whether adjusting their own strategy could change outcomes. For example, could powering down until a certain threshold is reached make them more “eligible” for curation attention? Or is that just a strategy game separate from the actual value of contribution? These are questions the community grapples with: how to navigate a system where reward patterns can feel unpredictable, even for those who have been building Hive for years.
AI enters the conversation as a lens, not a content generator. Could it help identify overlooked contributions, detect trends in voting, or provide insights into reward distribution? Perhaps, but defining the added value or quality of a post on Hive remains highly subjective. These are human judgments, and no AI currently can fully grasp what the community values. At best, AI could highlight patterns, but it cannot replace the nuanced perception of value that drives Hive’s ecosystem.
Hive’s tension is clear. Reputation, KE, and HP are still important, but visibility and recognition are often shaped by repeated interactions with high-powered accounts that tend to operate in specific communities. Veteran contributors sometimes see their efforts overshadowed, while other authors repeatedly benefit from curated support. This isn’t the result of protocol rules breaking, but of natural patterns in how the system interacts with human behavior and delegation. The questions remain: can Hive reward meaningful, consistent contribution without letting certain patterns dominate visibility? Is there any strategy for veterans to regain attention without compromising their principles? And can AI provide useful insight into these dynamics, or does it merely highlight patterns we already intuitively see?
I’d love to hear from the community, especially those who have been contributing for years. Do you feel overlooked? Are there ways Hive could better recognize consistent contributors? And is AI a tool that could meaningfully help understand reward dynamics, or is the challenge ultimately accepting that influence and recognition are concentrated—and always hard to define?
Cheers,
Peter
I think building your account takes a lot of work and it goes well beyond just writing the posts. People might argue that interactions are fake because they are just looking for upvotes, but I would counter if you do it right that might be how it starts, but it can very quickly (okay, maybe not too quickly) evolve into something else.
It all depends. When one writes genuine comments, yes. But still then it takes times to build up the relationship. So yes, I do agree, but I do think that at least 65% of the comments are vote catching comments.
The funny thing is, a lot of people still don't vote comments. I know I used to fall into that category. It's only been the past two years or so that I started upvoting comments as a way of saying thanks for visiting. Unless they are clearly spam of course.
Starting a power down will put a target on your back and whales might put an auto downvote against your account.
!WINE
So we are more or less stuck :)
I've taken a break from Hive during the winter break after once again being hit by bully downvotes which is just ridiculous and makes me feel I just should move on from Hive as I never really missed it to be honest.
The problems are clear and they have been in place for many years and only seem to be getting worse. The fact that there are no real new users while most end up giving up makes it hard to really find/make a real community here. It's individuals like you who would really keep me here. I don't see anything fundamentally changing that would improve the situation here on Hive.
I did miss your the post of today and was wondering what happened.
In my opinion the whales are killing it. They do feed the big curation accounts. And those only upvote the same authors over and over again. And these authors do create an incredible selling wall.
Currently I have too much fun with seeing what data I extract from the blockchain. All that info will be be published when I leave.
I had some chats with the whale who did downvote you. While that was a bad judgement of him, he does have good intentions.
I'm feeling the same way, this switch to curation groups (along with the HBD Yield which puts massive sell pressure on the Hive Price) have been deadly for the Hive price with an overall decline as a result. There is just zero incentive for people to hold Hive Power while most of the ones who get curated over and over again just dump systematically.
The problem with the Downvote whale is that he has a clear case of Narcissism disorder, being friendly to some but then abusing his power to bully others.