When Musk said DOGE could change the game, what did he see?

In a Silicon Valley conference room at three in the morning, Musk brushed off the microphone: “Why do I insist on betting on DOGE? Because it can leverage the most stubborn gears—government efficiency.” Under the spotlight of the All-In Summit, this assertion was like a stone thrown into the lake.

Today's DOGE has long surpassed being a 'joke coin'. In Tesla factories, workers use DOGE to pay for lunch; in African medical aid projects, it skips bank delays to directly procure medications; even NASA's space memorabilia store has quietly added payment options featuring the Shiba Inu logo. While traditional finance is still mired in layers of approval, DOGE is tearing open the cracks with a transfer speed of 0.1 seconds.

But Musk's ambitions go far beyond this. With the popularization of Starlink smartphones and the rollout of Optimus robots, DOGE could become the first 'universal currency for humans and machines'—your coffee is made by a robot, tipped with DOGE; the self-driving taxi next door accepts DOGE for tips. This borderless, lightweight payment is precisely the key to breaking the bureaucratic system.

“Don't ask when cryptocurrency will replace the dollar,” Musk winked at reporters after the meeting, “ask yourself: How long can the old system hold up when efficiency is sharp enough?” #Allindoge走起