The way to read $ANSEM is that the flywheel is the actual asset and the price is just the output of it. Here's how the loop spins:
1. Ansem holds 58% of the supply, so most of it isn't for sale.
2. He pulls the creator fees from his Pump.fun profile and airdrops them back to $ANSEM holders, the stimmies. Holding pays you, so you have a reason to not sell.
3. BullpenFi gives airdrop points for posting with the ticker. When Ansem retweets you to his 1.1M followers, those points get boosted.
4. So posting earns you points, his retweet boosts them, points turn into airdrops, and airdrops give you a reason to hold. Less selling, price goes up, more attention, more posting. Then it starts over.
Every person in it has their self-interest pointing the same direction. Nobody in it needs to believe in a meme. The posting, the holding, the retweeting, all of it pays.
About $7M airdropped so far, and the goal is 1M holders, sitting around 25K right now.
The creator fees are the fuel, the airdrop is how it gets handed out, and the social points are what keeps pulling eyes back in.
1. Ansem holds 58% of the supply, so most of it isn't for sale.
2. He pulls the creator fees from his Pump.fun profile and airdrops them back to $ANSEM holders, the stimmies. Holding pays you, so you have a reason to not sell.
3. BullpenFi gives airdrop points for posting with the ticker. When Ansem retweets you to his 1.1M followers, those points get boosted.
4. So posting earns you points, his retweet boosts them, points turn into airdrops, and airdrops give you a reason to hold. Less selling, price goes up, more attention, more posting. Then it starts over.
Every person in it has their self-interest pointing the same direction. Nobody in it needs to believe in a meme. The posting, the holding, the retweeting, all of it pays.
About $7M airdropped so far, and the goal is 1M holders, sitting around 25K right now.
The creator fees are the fuel, the airdrop is how it gets handed out, and the social points are what keeps pulling eyes back in.