Should Hive fund HiveFest XI and ChainCulture this year? An honest go or no-go.
**This is not a proposal. It is a real question to the community, and I am genuinely fine with either answer.**

I have been head-deep in planning HiveFest XI and ChainCulture in Barcelona for September. Before I take it further, sign a venue and ask the DHF for anything, I want to put the honest picture in front of you and **let you decide whether Hive should do this at all right now**.
## Let me start with the uncomfortable part
If you read [igormuba's post about Hive just hitting 5 cents](https://hive.blog/hive-125125/@igormuba/hive-all-time-low-just) and the long thread under it, you already know the mood: a lot of people feel the DHF should fund almost nothing at these prices, especially anything without direct revenue. **I have read it, I largely agree, and that is exactly why I am asking this openly instead of just filing a proposal.**
Hive is around 5 cents. Any money the DHF puts into an event is real money leaving the shared pot. To be blunt about the scale: a roughly 45,000 HBD ask is, in HIVE terms at today's price, **on the order of 900,000 HIVE of sell-side weight**. That is not nothing, and pretending otherwise would be dishonest.
I will work hard to bring in external and multi-chain sponsors to cover as much of the cost as possible, and to repay parts of it back to the DHF as those sponsors land. But I am not going to oversell that. Even in the best case, **Hive would still be a sponsor of its own event, so some amount of HBD gets printed regardless**, just a bigger or a smaller amount. So the question is not "free or not free." The question is whether this spend is worth it for Hive at this price, in this market.
If your answer is no, that is a completely valid answer, and honestly it gives me a quiet summer. **I would rather hear a clear no now than push something the community does not want.**
## What I would actually be asking you to fund
HiveFest XI is the annual gathering, 17 to 20 September in Barcelona. The piece that needs real funding is ChainCulture on Friday 18 September: **a free, open, one-day, two-track event**, one track dedicated to Hive, the other a deliberate mix of other chains, AI, the maker scene, music and digital art.
The reason for the timing is the one genuinely strong card in this hand. The European Blockchain Convention runs in Barcelona the two days before, with 6,000+ attendees from 70+ countries. ChainCulture lands the day after it closes, so **a city full of founders, builders and investors is already here, for free, with an open calendar**. Last year's first ChainCulture, from a cold start and with no such tailwind, still had **350+ people actually check in at the venue**.
## The honest case, including its limits
**I will not pretend this prints money for Hive.** It does not, certainly not directly or measurably.
What it does do: **it points our community outward instead of inward**. For years HiveFest has mostly been us meeting us, a reunion. That is lovely, but it does not reach anyone new. ChainCulture keeps the reunion and turns it toward thousands of people who have never touched Hive. It gives fresh eyes on the chain, a funnel for developers, creators and makers, real content output, and frankly some morale at a low moment.
And here is the part I think is fair to admit out loud: **past events have struggled to convert into actual business**, partly because Hive does not have plug-and-play products to hand a partner (no off-the-shelf payment, backup, survey or data solutions). That is a real gap. I would rather name it than hide it. The maker and hackathon side of ChainCulture is, to me, exactly where we could start building toward those solutions, with new people, rather than only talking among ourselves.
## What I would do to keep it responsible
If the community says go, I would: chase sponsors to cover as much as possibl
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