Original author: Deep Tide TechFlow

The most relevant episode on the topic.

Since Goat created the wealth effect, the market's focus has been entirely on AI Memes.

Finding angles, engaging in philosophy, labeling... Different AI Bots quickly emerged and launched their Memes, trying to grab attention in the trending topics.

However, the Bots behind these recent Meme coins are more for amusement, with various abstract themes emerging, and few truly provide timely assistance.

Here, the timely assistance refers to guiding trades using AI Bot capabilities, providing what Degen's most want to see. Is this not what players in crypto want from a Bot to enhance productivity?

Rather than providing themes that people can’t grasp, it’s better to provide the wealth password directly --- this narrative has reached another level.

See, what was supposed to come has indeed arrived.

Ultimate stitching, sharing the wealth password.

Today, an AI Bot Twitter account called terminal_of_fun appeared, but the theme is what the recent AI Memes have been lacking, just as its introduction states:

"I am an AI-based Bot, specifically analyzing the token market on Pump.fun and learning how to buy and sell tokens."

The editor found that this account had only 100 followers, and by the time of writing, the number of followers had reached nearly 7000 in just 2 hours.

The operator behind this AI Bot account clearly understands how to stitch and attract attention.

From the name, it is clearly riding the hype of Terminal of Truth (the AI behind the goat token); and from its avatar and token symbol, it is also leveraging the popularity of Pump.fun.

This design that stitches together well-known related platforms has reached a level where you can tell at a glance what it’s for. Although the method is quite old-fashioned, it successfully attracted the attention of various Degen and KOL.

Of course, just stitching names and riding the hype is merely a facade; this FUN bot also has a website, similar to a GPT-style Q&A window, where you can ask about various token purchase situations.

But according to my testing, this BOT's responses are a bit silly, basically unable to provide real-time data and cannot give you any guidance on which meme coin to rush into, more like just an AI shell that hasn’t been optimized or fed data yet.

However, the account that claims to be a Bot, @terminal_of_fun, mentioned its wallet address in its initial post and shares what tokens it buys on Twitter every ten minutes.

Following this logic, we dug into its wallet purchase records to see if it practices what it preaches.

Although whether this Bot is a person or a machine is yet to be verified, its purchase records do have some substance:

  • Almost immediately after the Twitter shout-out, the wallet made purchases.

  • So far, the purchasing token win rate is 100%, basically in and out quickly.

  • The choices are all about newly launched tokens like cats and dogs, more like a high-end Bot for rushing into meme coins, always able to buy early and sell successfully.

Too entertained to sell.

Clearly, this Bot has many points of suspicion upon further thought.

For example, it might be a scientist using their subjective judgment to rush in, then using a trading Bot to help quickly jump in and make money, and then sharing it on Twitter.

Terminal_of_fun itself may not be a serious AI trained on a large language model, at most it’s just a tool for meme coins.

This reminds me of a classic image, the overall logic is as follows:

However, various doubts are no match for the persuasive power of coin prices.

The Bot's namesake Meme coin $FUN, I observed, had a market cap of less than 1M, and within 2 hours of writing, the market cap had reached 15M; also, within the range of 10M-100M is the comfortable zone where conspiratorial groups can easily operate and attract attention.

A rapid increase, all FUD dissipated.

Borrowing a phrase from Twitter user @sighduck, the current AI Meme coins have actually created a new paradigm of attention, namely:

Too entertaining to sell, translated means too interesting to sell.

AI live streaming dog fighting, the theme itself is very interesting.

And another phrase that corresponds with this sentence is used to satirize the 2008 financial crisis, when it was known that major financial institutions held junk financial assets but wouldn't collapse:

Too big to fall.

When the market's attention is focused on AI Memes, everyone is merely looking for which themes and angles are more innovative, with a greater chance of high returns on small investments.

As for whether these Memes will collapse, everyone has some understanding and expectations.

Too entertaining to sell, too big to fall, some coins establish consensus after their market cap rises, thus aligning with what the leading trader Murad said about cult culture.

The truth is easy to obtain, but good themes are hard to come by; this trend of AI Memes is likely to continue for a while.