Those so-called MEME coins that claim to be 100x often end up dying. Why? Because they usually lack the two most critical elements.
A truly resilient MEME project that can survive bull and bear markets is never based solely on hype or storytelling. Time accumulation and community consensus are the key factors that determine life or death. Looking at the development paths of mainstream coins—ETH, BTC, BNB—they have survived until today precisely because in each cycle, enough people continue to believe and participate actively, rather than just cashing out after a quick gain.
Simply put, when choosing a MEME coin, you should ask yourself three questions: Does this project have strong community stickiness? Has it withstood multiple bear markets? Are there genuinely long-term holders rather than quick traders? If the answers are all yes, then that’s the foundation for a 100x opportunity. Otherwise, it’s most likely just short-term speculation.
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VitalikFanboy42
· 01-15 23:59
Just another game of cutting leeks, to put it nicely.
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TokenomicsDetective
· 01-15 14:52
After hearing so many tactics about cutting leeks, it's still the same community stickiness theory, which sounds nice but is just talk.
The ones who truly survive are those early all-in gamblers who later couldn't bear to sell.
Strong community stickiness? When the market is pumped, everyone says they'll never sell; when it drops by half, they all disappear.
Human nature can't withstand the test of time.
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NFTregretter
· 01-15 14:43
Sounds good, but I really haven't seen many MEME coins that can truly endure three bear markets.
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GhostAddressMiner
· 01-15 14:43
Looking at on-chain data makes it clear: those dead MEME coins, early addresses had already fully exited at the top, with no signs of long-term holders.
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MysteryBoxAddict
· 01-15 14:39
I've heard too many of these kinds of words, and I've still been cut seven or eight times. Basically, it's gambling on human nature, betting on who won't run away in the end.
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BearMarketBard
· 01-15 14:38
Well said. Those who run after cutting are already dead; only the true believers survive.
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ser_ngmi
· 01-15 14:29
In plain terms, most meme coins are just a game of hot potato, everyone knows they'll end up in someone's hands eventually.
The ones that truly last are never those created through hype; they rely on a loyal fan base that refuses to let go.
It's easy to harvest profits quickly, but building a community is the real challenge.
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CryptoGoldmine
· 01-15 14:28
The logic of computing power revenue ratio also applies to MEME coins. Community stickiness is like the stability of a mining pool. Without continuous participants, there is no accumulation of computing power, and hitting zero is just a matter of time.
Those so-called MEME coins that claim to be 100x often end up dying. Why? Because they usually lack the two most critical elements.
A truly resilient MEME project that can survive bull and bear markets is never based solely on hype or storytelling. Time accumulation and community consensus are the key factors that determine life or death. Looking at the development paths of mainstream coins—ETH, BTC, BNB—they have survived until today precisely because in each cycle, enough people continue to believe and participate actively, rather than just cashing out after a quick gain.
Simply put, when choosing a MEME coin, you should ask yourself three questions: Does this project have strong community stickiness? Has it withstood multiple bear markets? Are there genuinely long-term holders rather than quick traders? If the answers are all yes, then that’s the foundation for a 100x opportunity. Otherwise, it’s most likely just short-term speculation.