【The less people talk about PEPE, the more I dare not ignore it】
Breakfast is not finished yet, and PEPE's K-line has already lifted my spirits. With chopsticks holding a youtiao, my eyes fixed on my phone, I watch that little green candle gently step on it and bounce back up, just like me being pulled repeatedly when I was stuck after chasing the high back then. 0.000004, this price still looks so unreal, like someone casually sneezed out this number, but it’s precisely this "joke coin" that always seems to twitch unexpectedly when I think it’s about to cool down.
Will you try a trade at this position?
To be honest, scrolling through WeChat Moments and group chats, almost no one is mentioning PEPE anymore. The brothers who used to flood the screen with "PEPE GOD" and "into the psychiatric hospital" have either moved on to new Meme battlefields or quietly deleted their favorites. The quieter it gets, the more restless I become—this pattern is too familiar; every time the market collectively forgets about it, it always manages to resurrect from the grave. Look at this consolidation pattern; the volume hasn’t really increased, but it hasn’t collapsed either, and the RSI is stuck at 40.7, neither hot nor cold, as if waiting for someone.
One possibility is that it may really settle down and fall into silence. After all, there’s no fundamental support, no team rallying the troops, and no new memes to back it up; faith alone can’t hold it up for long. If the market takes another dive, it’s highly likely to break down with it, and then it’s the old script of "goodbye, never to be seen again". But another possibility… I’m actually a bit afraid of missing out. What if one day a big Twitter account suddenly posts a dog emoji with the caption "PEPE revival," and then the whales quietly start buying, emotions suddenly ignite, and this line unpredictably shoots up? MEME coins have never been a place of logic; they’re about heartbeat and coincidence.
I’m not calling for a long or short; my instincts as an old trader tell me: don’t get off the train easily, and don’t bet heavily. Leave some position to act as a lookout. Sometimes the most dangerous thing isn’t the crash; it’s waking up one morning to find PEPE has doubled again, and you deleted it from your favorites because it was "too boring". That feeling of missing out is more painful than being stuck. So, the less people talk about it, the more I dare not ignore it.
