Young people worldwide are flocking to the cryptocurrency market; it really is a changing world.
In India, 75 million young people have started buying coins. Programmers and college students are discussing market trends with more enthusiasm than they do movies at night.
In the U.S., 28 million people are participating. High school students, Silicon Valley folks, and Wall Street traders are all involved; it's no longer just a small circle.
South America and Southeast Asia are also not falling behind:
In Brazil, one in every five people is trading coins, and in Indonesia, over 20 million people have jumped on board, with momentum surpassing many developed countries.
The entire cryptocurrency market now has 560 million participants, half of whom are young people aged 18–34, especially with Asia charging ahead.
This is not just a simple wave of "investment frenzy," but a genuine rewriting of the wealth landscape.
In the past, it was said that "trading coins is speculation for a minority," but looking back now, it increasingly resembles a new game initiated by the younger generation.
How this game will unfold and who will come out on top remains uncertain.