Written by: ChandlerZ, Foresight News
On March 16, OpenSea co-founder and CEO Devin Finzer announced on Twitter that the OpenSea Foundation had decided to postpone the SEA token launch originally scheduled for March 30. Finzer first announced in October 2025 that SEA would launch in Q1 2026; now, with Q1 drawing to a close, a new timeline remains undetermined.

Finzer attributed the delay to the current challenging crypto market environment and emphasized that "SEA will only be launched once," with the foundation choosing to wait until everything is ready rather than forcing its way to the original date.
OpenSea has proposed an optional compensation scheme for users who participated in the Wave 3 to Wave 6 rewards program after the Q1 schedule was announced.
The core logic is to refund fees in exchange for Treasure rewards. Users can apply for a refund of transaction fees charged by the platform during these rounds of activities. However, if a refund is chosen, the Treasure rewards earned in the corresponding round will be removed from the user's account. If a user chooses not to receive a refund, their existing Treasure benefits will remain unchanged, and the foundation promises to give them priority consideration during TGE, and these benefits will be independent of the allocation amounts from previous activities.
This design was implemented in response to community dissatisfaction with the reward mechanism. Previously, Wave 1 distributed a $12.2 million prize pool, including NFTs and tokens, but community feedback indicated that obtaining higher-tier chests required extremely high trading volume, and the reward distribution was highly random, drawing criticism that it indirectly encouraged wash trading. OpenSea subsequently suspended its new XP reward system as a result.
In addition to the refund program, OpenSea announced a 60-day zero-fee policy starting March 31. This zero-fee period covers the platform's own token trading fees. After the period expires, a new fee structure will be introduced, which Finzer claims will be more competitive for high-frequency trading users.
On the product front, while the event originally scheduled for March 30th has been cancelled, the team will hold another event focusing on product updates in the coming months. OpenSea's OS2 platform officially exited Beta in May 2025 and currently supports cross-chain token trading across 22 chains. The mobile application has entered closed beta testing and includes an AI-powered trading tool called OpenSea Intelligence. Perpetual contract trading functionality is also on the roadmap.
Behind the delayed issuance of tokens lies a shrinking industry environment. CryptoSlam data shows that NFT sales totaled $5.63 billion in 2025, a 37% decrease compared to $8.9 billion in 2024. Conversely, the supply expanded to 1.34 billion tokens, while the price dropped from $124 to $96. The total market capitalization of NFTs was estimated at approximately $2.4 billion by the end of 2025.
Despite this backdrop, OpenSea's market share has actually increased, but the numbers are no longer driven by NFTs. According to data from The Block, OpenSea currently holds approximately 71% of the Ethereum NFT trading market share. After the announcement of the SEA token, its market share climbed steadily, but of the $2.6 billion monthly trading volume in October 2025, over 90% came from token transactions, while the trading volume of NFTs themselves remained weak.
In May 2025, after OS2 was released from beta, OpenSea's monthly active users rebounded to 467,000, the highest since 2023. However, as the entire market cooled down, the enthusiasm for trading in the NFT market also declined significantly.
This also explains why OpenSea is rushing to transform. Perpetual contracts, cross-chain token trading, and mobile applications are all ways to find new traffic entry points beyond NFTs. The SEA token was originally the grand finale of this transformation narrative, but now that it has been postponed, the momentum for the transformation is also hanging in the balance.
50% of the token supply is committed to the community, and 50% of the platform's revenue after launch will be used to buy back SEA. Users can stake SEA to support specific collectibles or token projects. This token economic model drove a surge in trading volume when it was announced in October 2025, but the current delay may be eroding the community's expectations built up at that time.
At the end of his tweet, Finzer mentioned that the previous timeline announcement was "too early" and created unnecessary uncertainty. He promised that when the foundation sets a new timeline next time, it will be "thoughtful and very specific." Until then, the community's remaining confidence in SEA may depend on whether the 60-day zero-fee period can bring substantial growth in user retention.

