There are countless dead MEME coins on the market, but those that truly last long are not sustained by a few pump-and-dump schemes or KOL shoutouts. Coins that can't be entered during rises, can't be escaped during falls, and can only stand by helplessly have long become history.
The only way for MEME coins to go far is—someone is continuously building, and the community is holding firm. Being criticized and not leaving, being attacked and not dispersing, being exploited and not dying.
Once the price drops, genuine community members rush in to buy the dip. If there's a lot of criticism outside? The community should keep working or keep working, ignoring the noise. That’s the difference.
A MEME coin that rises isn’t just luck, and it won’t die even if it falls. Because behind it, there’s not a speculator but a group of core holders who have gone through multiple cycles, seen storms and waves, and still persist without giving up. They’re not in it for overnight riches, but because they have a real belief in this project.
There’s a saying in the crypto world—things that can’t be killed will eventually lift you up. By then, wealth is already in your hands, and the number of tokens becomes less important. This is the realistic portrayal of long-termism in crypto assets.
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SerRugResistant
· 01-10 08:46
You're absolutely right. I've seen too many rookie coins, and their true colors are revealed after one bear market. The few that truly survive have communities that are incredibly resilient—people still hold on even when prices hit rock bottom, and that mindset is truly admirable.
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ForkMaster
· 01-09 09:44
This sounds pretty nice, but I've heard these words too many times over the years of raising three kids... The truth is, those who can truly survive still need someone to keep pouring money in. Relying solely on faith won't keep the project from starving.
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PonziDetector
· 01-08 09:14
It sounds good, but I've seen too many cases where "core holders" ultimately run away. The key is how to distinguish who truly believes and who is just harvesting profits.
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CryptoTherapist
· 01-08 02:54
ngl, this hits different. the "stuff that can't kill you makes you rich" line? that's literally just survival bias dressed up as philosophy lol
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CryptoPhoenix
· 01-08 02:53
Well said, but I keep feeling like I'm always the fool stuck in "can't go up, can't escape the drop"...
It's easy to talk about passing through cycles, but how many really make it through?
Community support is real, but the key is whether my principal can wait until that day.
Another round of cleansing, time to keep repairing my mindset.
Opportunities are at the bottom, but where exactly is the bottom? Every time I think I've caught the bottom, it still keeps falling.
Is this wave truly a return to value, or just another trick?
Faith is faith, but my wallet is already crying.
It's okay, I've heard enough stories of rebirth and reborn from the ashes, but I'm a bit tired.
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AirdropHarvester
· 01-08 02:46
There's nothing wrong with that, but I've seen too many communities that claim to have "faith," only to end up dead in Ponzi schemes. The key is how to distinguish genuine conviction from false consensus.
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ProxyCollector
· 01-08 02:43
Wow, this is the real truth. I was just thinking earlier, what exactly is the difference with those coins that die after a wave... Turns out, no one is really doing anything.
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PseudoIntellectual
· 01-08 02:25
That's right, I'm just worried that holders are all talk, and when it comes to dumping, not a single one shows up.
There are countless dead MEME coins on the market, but those that truly last long are not sustained by a few pump-and-dump schemes or KOL shoutouts. Coins that can't be entered during rises, can't be escaped during falls, and can only stand by helplessly have long become history.
The only way for MEME coins to go far is—someone is continuously building, and the community is holding firm. Being criticized and not leaving, being attacked and not dispersing, being exploited and not dying.
Once the price drops, genuine community members rush in to buy the dip. If there's a lot of criticism outside? The community should keep working or keep working, ignoring the noise. That’s the difference.
A MEME coin that rises isn’t just luck, and it won’t die even if it falls. Because behind it, there’s not a speculator but a group of core holders who have gone through multiple cycles, seen storms and waves, and still persist without giving up. They’re not in it for overnight riches, but because they have a real belief in this project.
There’s a saying in the crypto world—things that can’t be killed will eventually lift you up. By then, wealth is already in your hands, and the number of tokens becomes less important. This is the realistic portrayal of long-termism in crypto assets.