@Yi He said something that might get criticized:
💗最强meme社区不服进来辩论💗
Nowadays, many memes are no longer worthy of being called memes.
The memes from before had real punchlines.
They weren't created just to issue tokens; instead, there were fun and funny things first,
which everyone played with, repeated, and remixed,
and the community slowly grew,
while the tokens merely attached themselves to the culture.
You might forget the price,
but you won't forget that punchline.
Back then, memes,
consensus could last for several months,
even half a year or a year.
Not because the projects were amazing,
but because everyone was genuinely playing the same joke.
The community really had faith and was building.
Later, you will notice a very obvious change.
Now, many BSC memes,
the processes are almost identical.
Who said something
find an angle
name it
enter the initial phase
pull one
wait for people to follow
smash
From start to finish,
not a single step is fun or funny.
When entering the initial phase,
retail investors think this is consensus.
When the initial phase crashes,
only then do retail investors realize this is just a rhythm.
Before,
it was
the community formed first, and prices gradually moved.
Now,
it's
prices are pulled first, and the community is forced to fabricate.
You might not even have time to remember what it was called;
it's already gone.
So the problem isn't that memes die quickly,
but rather,
these things never had memes from the start.
They have no chance of being remembered,
they can only be traded.
Without punchlines, there are no repetitions;
without repetitions, there is no community;
without a community, there cannot be consensus.
All that remains is a game of
"who runs fast survives."
What is a true meme?
It's when you don't look at the K-line
but are still willing to stay in the group to watch people play with punchlines.
It's something that can still be dug out and mocked or recreated after a few months.
Not
staring at who said what, tweeted what, memeing for the sake of memeing, desperately finding angles to narrate,
then later asking if it's time to trade.
So it's not that the meme sector is failing,
but too many people mistake angle narration for culture.
Coins without consensus
can only rely on the next person to take over;
meme without memorable points
is destined to only live for a day.
True memes
are those that can be remembered;
those that can't be remembered
are merely one-time consumables, no matter how much they rise. $币安人生
{alpha}(560x924fa68a0fc644485b8df8abfa0a41c2e7744444)