Friends With Benefits is widely considered the first social DAO – not a protocol, an investment club, or a collector, but a cultural community you join by holding a token. Where The LAO pools capital to invest and PleasrDAO pools capital to collect, FWB pools people: the treasury and the token exist to fund a scene – events, a city network, editorial, and creative projects – rather than to buy an asset or back a venture. It rounds out the non-DeFi archetypes catalogued in types of DAOs, alongside the failed one-shot crowdfund (ConstitutionDAO) and the NFT-native creative org (Nouns).
The social-DAO thesis: a community you buy into
FWB started in September 2020 as a token-gated Discord server: to get in you both wrote an application the community reviewed and held enough $FWB to signal, in the founders' words, “meaningful ownership in the DAO.” That pairing – a human gate and a capital gate – is the whole social-DAO idea. Members share governing power over a community treasury and capture the upside of what the group makes together, which is meant to align artists, writers, and builders around a common scene rather than a common trade.
By the time a16z led its round the DAO had grown to nearly 2,000 members and had already spun up a token-gated events app, an NFT gallery, a web3 editorial publication, a virtual music studio, and global parties. The token is the membership card, the vote, and the speculative asset all at once.
What the token gates
Access is tiered by holdings. A Global Member holds 75 FWB for unrestricted access to the whole ecosystem; a Local Member holds 5 FWB for a lighter tier scoped to FWB Cities and events. On top of the balance requirement sits the application, so the token alone is necessary but not sufficient. The most visible output is IRL: local city chapters and the annual FWB FEST, a multi-day gathering (its fifth edition runs July 31–August 2, 2026) that turns the online membership into a physical scene. In that sense FWB is a bet that a tradeable token can bootstrap real belonging.
From social club to product org
After the 2021 bull market the FOMO faded, and FWB has spent 2024–2025 deliberately growing up: under CEO Greg Bresnitz it reframed itself from an events-and-hype community into an organization that ships products in music, film, and culture with the crypto tucked “under the hood.” The flagship is Friends With Builders, a cohort program run with roughly twenty infrastructure partners (AWS, Alchemy, thirdweb, QuickNode, Filecoin, Base, World and others) to help creative technologists ship early-stage products – a pivot from throwing parties to incubating them. It is a candid answer to a hard question every social DAO faces: once the market cools, what is the token actually for?
How Caper approaches this
FWB makes the tension in a token-gated community explicit: the same $FWB that grants access and a vote is a freely tradeable ERC-20, so status has a spot price. A well-funded newcomer can simply buy the balance the tier requires (the application aside), and an early member can sell their standing to the highest bidder. Belonging and voice ride on the market, not on anything earned inside the community.
A caper keeps the capital side liquid but splits the governance side off from it. Holding and trading a caper's token happens on its bonding curve like any other asset – but a caper's decisive governance weight comes from a soulbound proof-of-vote token that is minted one-per-vote, is non-transferable, and cannot be bought. Vote weight combines held tokens and that earned record – w = (t·v) / (V·T) – and the same quantity sets your exit share of the treasury (verified against contracts/src/caper_dao.rs). Capital still counts, but a bag alone can't capture a caper the way it can meet an FWB tier: the part that can't be bought is the part you have to show up for. It is a different answer to FWB's own question – the token stays a market, but the community's voice is earned, not purchased.