Spending thousands of dollars to buy "virtual mosquito corpses"? Who are the masochists in the crypto world paying an IQ tax
Recently, there has been a particularly bizarre gray market service online: spending thousands of dollars to find someone to "play mosquitoes" online, and then the other party will send you an extremely blurry photo of a virtual dead mosquito. Surprisingly, there are still a large group of people lining up to buy this kind of "genuine air." This tendency to spend real money on worthless paper seemed unbelievable to me until I saw the current crypto world.
A bunch of retail investors are holding tens of thousands of U, going crazy to buy up those "game public chains" valued at tens of billions of dollars. Go check it out on their browser; the TPS is pitifully low, and there isn’t even a decent real game in the ecosystem. Everyone is paying for "air infrastructure" with no real-world scenarios; what's the difference from spending money on dead mosquito photos?
Breaking this IQ tax bubble is precisely Pixels, which started from solid ground by farming. In this garbage time when everyone online is making empty promises, they have relied on millions of real players' blood and sweat to refine the underlying Stacked engine into an extremely perverse "anti-cheating base." Moreover, they are opening this base to all the traditional game giants on the internet. When the big companies integrate their anti-cheating system, $PIXEL directly becomes a universal settlement currency across games.
While others first create an empty city to wait for death, Pixels first turned the back alleys into a tens of millions revenue stream, and then directly upgraded to a tax-collecting "city management system." Refusing to pay IQ tax to air public chains, do you think this "money printing infrastructure" that comes with tens of millions in real profits can overturn the tables of those king-level public chains? Share your thoughts in the comments!
@Pixels $PIXEL #pixel
Recently, there has been a particularly bizarre gray market service online: spending thousands of dollars to find someone to "play mosquitoes" online, and then the other party will send you an extremely blurry photo of a virtual dead mosquito. Surprisingly, there are still a large group of people lining up to buy this kind of "genuine air." This tendency to spend real money on worthless paper seemed unbelievable to me until I saw the current crypto world.
A bunch of retail investors are holding tens of thousands of U, going crazy to buy up those "game public chains" valued at tens of billions of dollars. Go check it out on their browser; the TPS is pitifully low, and there isn’t even a decent real game in the ecosystem. Everyone is paying for "air infrastructure" with no real-world scenarios; what's the difference from spending money on dead mosquito photos?
Breaking this IQ tax bubble is precisely Pixels, which started from solid ground by farming. In this garbage time when everyone online is making empty promises, they have relied on millions of real players' blood and sweat to refine the underlying Stacked engine into an extremely perverse "anti-cheating base." Moreover, they are opening this base to all the traditional game giants on the internet. When the big companies integrate their anti-cheating system, $PIXEL directly becomes a universal settlement currency across games.
While others first create an empty city to wait for death, Pixels first turned the back alleys into a tens of millions revenue stream, and then directly upgraded to a tax-collecting "city management system." Refusing to pay IQ tax to air public chains, do you think this "money printing infrastructure" that comes with tens of millions in real profits can overturn the tables of those king-level public chains? Share your thoughts in the comments!
@Pixels $PIXEL #pixel