Arch Public’s co-founder said what a lot of people in crypto already feel: Crypto Twitter has gone strangely quiet. The wild timelines full of memes, hot takes, and constant drama just don’t move like they used to. Things feel slower, lighter, and honestly, a little dull.

But that doesn’t mean crypto’s dead. It’s more about who’s still around. When the market’s hot, everyone’s loud traders, influencers, the whole crowd. Speculation is easy, optimism is everywhere, and Twitter feels electric. When the party winds down, prices stall, and all those big stories stop working, the noise drops off fast. The short-term speculators disappear, influencers post less, and engagement tanks. What’s left? A smaller, quieter crew: the long-haul builders, researchers, and investors who care more about what’s real and less about hype.

The co-founder thinks this silence actually says something important. It shows the market’s not panicking it’s pausing. In past cycles, the loudest moments came right before the top or during a crash. But these quiet stretches? People are just waiting. Maybe it’s for new rules, more money coming in, or the next big thing to wake the market up.

There’s another side to it, too. Crypto Twitter used to reward anyone quick and outrageous enough to grab attention. Now, after years of chaos, busted projects, and regulators breathing down everyone’s neck, people are more careful. Nobody wants to make a big call in public that’ll come back to haunt them.

So, a quieter Crypto Twitter isn’t a bad sign. If anything, it means the space is maturing. It’s less about viral stunts and more about slow, steady progress the kind that doesn’t always show up on your feed.