Why have the post-2000s become the new main force in the cryptocurrency world? From the perspective of the economic cycle, how the 'daring to go all in' generation rewrites the rules of the game

While many still think that the cryptocurrency world is a battlefield for the post-85s and post-90s 'old leeks', the post-2000s have already entered in bulk with the sharpness of 'not afraid to lose'—some have even achieved A7 and A8 wealth leaps through a wave of market trends, completely breaking the stereotype that 'the cryptocurrency world is exclusive to predecessors'. Behind this is not simply that 'young people dare to gamble', but rather the different choices engraved in the growth trajectories of three generations under different economic cycles.

The post-80s generation is a 'symbiotic being of luck and pressure' during an economic upturn. They were born in the period of reform and opening up, riding the wave of economic takeoff in the 1990s and the explosion of globalization and the internet in the early 21st century. When they graduated, they encountered a labor shortage and low housing prices, easily reaping the early dividends of the real estate and internet boom; however, when they entered the stage of starting a family, they hit the turning point of the real estate market and the monopoly of internet giants, facing the pressures of marriage, raising children, and repaying loans one after another. When they entered the cryptocurrency world, they were more concerned about 'not being able to afford to lose', which also gave rise to stable industry predecessors like Zhao Changpeng (post-70s) and Xu Mingxing (post-80s).