These days, Meme coins are flooding the screens, and the entire network is filled with ridicule. At first, I was quite puzzled—whether this wave of popularity is just hurting everyone's pockets or if people are scared off by the previous pump-and-dump schemes. Now, I see everything as fake?
To all those who mock in groups, I dare to bet that most of them haven't actually made any profit from this round of market movement. Sarcastic as it is, it hasn't brought any high-level satisfaction. Instead, what happens? The hype in the crypto world keeps escalating, and more and more spectators are joining in.
Looking at it from another angle, when the market is so dead, artificially creating hot topics and giving retail investors something to do—that's essentially advanced marketing. During periods when the market lacks natural enthusiasm, this kind of operation actually boosts participation. I'm not here to criticize; in fact, I’ve followed the rhythm, and this week, I’ve definitely been fed well.
The crypto world has never been a noble place. The Web2 aesthetic and rules, when forcibly applied to Web3, just slap you in the face. Instead of fighting it, it's better to relax your mindset and adapt to the game logic of this circle. After all, everyone involved knows well that only a few can make money.
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RamenDeFiSurvivor
· 01-09 11:51
Honestly, most of the people who mock haven't made any money. That's the real truth.
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DataPickledFish
· 01-09 11:50
Well, in the end, it's all just acting. Everyone knows in their heart who makes money and who loses.
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ContractFreelancer
· 01-09 11:49
Those who made money are all silent, and those shouting are all the ones who didn't get any meat.
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MemeCoinSavant
· 01-09 11:42
according to my behavioral finance regression analysis of this exact copium pattern... the statistical significance of "everyone else lost money but i'm different" hovers right around p < 0.420. fascinating dataset honestly
Reply0
UnluckyLemur
· 01-09 11:41
That's right, those who criticize the most are actually the ones losing money. I'll be straightforward.
Following the trend can indeed make money, but the key is not to take it seriously.
That's how the crypto world works—adapt and profit, while those who argue are always the retail investors.
I also jumped on this meme wave, even though I didn't catch the biggest gains, it's still better than just watching the show.
Public shaming is the cheapest, and those who truly make money won't speak out.
These days, Meme coins are flooding the screens, and the entire network is filled with ridicule. At first, I was quite puzzled—whether this wave of popularity is just hurting everyone's pockets or if people are scared off by the previous pump-and-dump schemes. Now, I see everything as fake?
To all those who mock in groups, I dare to bet that most of them haven't actually made any profit from this round of market movement. Sarcastic as it is, it hasn't brought any high-level satisfaction. Instead, what happens? The hype in the crypto world keeps escalating, and more and more spectators are joining in.
Looking at it from another angle, when the market is so dead, artificially creating hot topics and giving retail investors something to do—that's essentially advanced marketing. During periods when the market lacks natural enthusiasm, this kind of operation actually boosts participation. I'm not here to criticize; in fact, I’ve followed the rhythm, and this week, I’ve definitely been fed well.
The crypto world has never been a noble place. The Web2 aesthetic and rules, when forcibly applied to Web3, just slap you in the face. Instead of fighting it, it's better to relax your mindset and adapt to the game logic of this circle. After all, everyone involved knows well that only a few can make money.