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Magic Eden cuts off wallets: the market has long stopped caring
Going offline with the wallet just lays out a bad hand
@DegenerateNews That breakout tweet didn’t create a crisis— the crisis had been building there for months; it just gave the whole thing a name. A Discord notice about the wallet going offline was read by the Solana NFT community as “abandonment” and “backstabbing.” The narrative shifted from “technical adjustments” to “betrayal,” and it also exposed that the emotional side was already pretty fragile. ME slid 99.94% from its $17 high and is now around $0.09, with a market cap of about $50 million. This tweet blew up because everyone already lacked patience for this project, not because it brought any new information.
The spread is definitely not small: outlets like Decrypt reminded Solana users to export private keys before May 1, with the original post getting 80k+ views and 94 replies. But the key is—the ME price didn’t budge at all. It wobbled all week between $0.096-$0.101, with daily trading volume of $4-5 million; liquidation was only a bit over $1000. This divergence points to the problem: traders had already filed Magic Eden under the “doesn’t matter” category. Twitter was loud about a “rug pull,” but on-chain everything was calm. The top three holders still hold about 51% of the supply; on-chain transfers look more like routine rebalancing than a panicked exit.
The community is split into two camps, but nobody has the answers
Interpretations of the “wallet going offline” tore the community apart: one side believes it’s necessary to focus—streamline the business, go All-in on Dicey, and let staking rewards and buybacks slowly start to work; the other side believes Magic Eden is already not a legitimate NFT marketplace anymore. This kind of disagreement is quietly driving capital out of the ME cycle and into other Solana plays, even though transaction volume on the protocol side is broadly unchanged. Meanwhile the broader market is rising (BTC +1.55%, ETH +3.4%), while ME just stands still. Decoupling from price action is the core signal—ME is no longer participating in the momentum of the crypto market.
@LeonidasNFT pointed out Magic Eden’s self-destructive communication in the Ordinals narrative, and that view is spreading. Trust is leaking away, but without any dramatic on-chain crash—instead it’s happening via a slow grind lower, which is often worse.
Conclusion: This tweet just made an established fact public—Magic Eden is in a structural decline. Chasing the emotion-short now is already too late. ME’s “stability” isn’t strength; it’s the market’s indifference. Long-term holders are stuck, while the position of real advantage belongs to the teams behind Solana-native competitors and the capital backing these projects.
**Judgment: **For ordinary traders, chasing this narrative wave is already late, and the marginal gains from an emotion-short are limited. What really benefits are the Solana-native competitors that are actively absorbing users and mindset migration, along with the builders and funds behind them. Long-term holders and passive capital should trim or exit, and rotate to alternatives with growth stories that are positively correlated with the broader market.