A long time ago, the current meme culture was explained as a plundering game conducted by a group of wealthy kids pretending to be decentralized.

The memes of the past were a niche culture that built a complete network system from the bottom through dissemination. Today's memes, on the contrary, construct communities from the top down.

Each meme team's costs are incredibly low, and every purchase brings interest to the wallets that come with private keys and control.

When a niche culture quickly becomes a mainstream culture, we should think about who is paying for this game, and what the significance of our payment is? Sarcasm? Fun? None of that. Currently, 99% of the memes on the market do not have the ability to build a large community network.

Every three days or thirty days, one after another, meme worth hundreds of millions of dollars rises. If there is no massive capital manipulation, I doubt anyone would believe it, and every penny in your pocket is paying for this simple and brutal scam.

Whether you are a retail investor or a meme project party, in the end, someone will pay for this seriously capital-eroding carnival.

In principle, Doge is qualitatively different from all POS memes.

In the past, countless friends around me told me that many memes would become the next Doge, but I don't believe that.

I even think that without Ethereum starting the blockchain 2.0 era, there wouldn't be today's cryptocurrency boom.

Perhaps there are differences in opinion with many people, but what remains unchanged is that many people's original intention in joining here is to pay for the future...

At least concepts are more interesting than hype, right?

$BTC $ETH #BTC☀ #eth