What Roam coordinates

Roam is an AI / DePIN infrastructure token, currently ranked 521st by market capitalization among the assets we track. Rather than a payments coin, Roam is the settlement and incentive layer for a distributed infrastructure network. The token's job is to bootstrap supply of a useful resource and pay for its consumption.

Roam (ROAM) is a decentralized protocol that enables users to generate and share location-based data, allowing for the creation of location-centric applications and services. It aims to empower users by rewarding them with ROAM tokens for contributing to the network.

How the network bootstraps supply and demand

The durable version of Roam is one where actual usage — inference, storage, connectivity — generates revenue that exceeds the incentives paid out. Until then, much of the demand for the token is subsidy-driven.

Background & fundamentals

The project publishes a whitepaper documenting its original design, which is worth reading before sizing any position in ROAM. In sector terms it is most often filed under Solana (SOL) Token and DePIN.

Where Roam sits in the market

With ROAM near $0.0105, Roam carries a market capitalization of $2.94M. Around $3.17M changes hands across exchanges in a typical 24-hour window. That is a turnover of about 107.82% of the float — unusually high, the kind of churn that accompanies major news or speculative spikes.

Almost the entire ROAM supply is already in circulation (~99.9% of the 1B cap), so future dilution is effectively off the table. ROAM remains -98% beneath its all-time high of $0.4755, the kind of gap that historically takes a full cycle or a fresh catalyst to close.

What the price history shows

The tape currently reads 24-hour -11.04%, 7-day +98.93%.

Volatility profile

Recent action puts Roam in the Extreme-volatility band — it is in a high-volatility regime — these are the conditions where outsized gains and losses both become more likely.

How to evaluate an AI/DePIN token like Roam

A grounded read on ROAM comes down to three questions:

  • Real demand — paying usage of the network's resource, not just provider rewards funded by ROAM emissions.
  • Supply growth — how much real-world or compute capacity the network has actually brought online.
  • Token economics — whether ROAM demand can outgrow the incentives the protocol pays to bootstrap it.

This page pulls live market data, on-chain stats where available, exchange-by-exchange volume, and our forecast model into one view so you can work through those questions in a single place. None of it is investment advice — it is a structured starting point for your own research.