If Bitcoin ever truly entered a prolonged bear market, the panic would be everywhere.
Headlines would scream, timelines would melt down, and “crypto is dead” would trend on Google for months. That’s how real capitulation looks loud, emotional, and impossible to ignore.
But that’s not what we’re seeing.
Search interest remains muted. Public obsession is absent. There is no mass fear, no widespread despair, no collective urge to declare the end.
In past cycles, Google search spikes marked the emotional extremes: euphoria at tops, despair at bottoms. Today, we’re stuck in neither which tells you something important.
Markets don’t bottom when everyone is calm and analytical. They bottom when participation collapses and conviction disappears.
The fact that bearish narratives feel forced rather than organic suggests we’re not in a terminal phase, but in a transitional one.
Bitcoin doesn’t need retail attention to build structure. It needs time, absorption, and disbelief. And historically, the loudest bear cries only arrive after the damage is done not before the next expansion begins.
Sometimes, what Google doesn’t show you matters more than what it does.
#bitcoin #Google #CryptoAnalysis $BTC


