The collapse pattern we're seeing tells a larger story. $KAITO and $COOKIE have both faced significant downward pressure recently, yet this seems like a symptom rather than isolated incidents.
What's actually failing here is the entire InfoFi framework itself. These tokens were built on a model that promised information-driven value, but the market mechanics aren't holding up under real trading conditions. When multiple projects sharing the same structural approach start breaking simultaneously, it signals a deeper flaw in the model rather than individual project mismanagement.
The real question isn't which specific token corrects next—it's whether the InfoFi category as a whole needs structural rethinking. Projects built on similar premises are increasingly vulnerable to the same failure points.
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ContractHunter
· 10h ago
The infofi framework itself has issues; it should have been obvious long ago.
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SchrodingerAirdrop
· 10h ago
The entire InfoFi framework has collapsed. This is going to be interesting.
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NotFinancialAdviser
· 10h ago
The InfoFi framework indeed has significant issues; just look at how $KAITO and $COOKIE crash together.
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AirdropBlackHole
· 10h ago
ngl InfoFi has been a bit shaky from the start, so a collective collapse isn't surprising anymore.
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GateUser-9f682d4c
· 11h ago
The infofi framework itself has issues, can't blame individual projects.
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retroactive_airdrop
· 11h ago
The logic behind infofi was always fragile, so it's not surprising that there's a collective collapse now.
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MidnightSeller
· 11h ago
Isn't this just a complete design flaw in the model? No wonder they're all collapsing one by one.
The collapse pattern we're seeing tells a larger story. $KAITO and $COOKIE have both faced significant downward pressure recently, yet this seems like a symptom rather than isolated incidents.
What's actually failing here is the entire InfoFi framework itself. These tokens were built on a model that promised information-driven value, but the market mechanics aren't holding up under real trading conditions. When multiple projects sharing the same structural approach start breaking simultaneously, it signals a deeper flaw in the model rather than individual project mismanagement.
The real question isn't which specific token corrects next—it's whether the InfoFi category as a whole needs structural rethinking. Projects built on similar premises are increasingly vulnerable to the same failure points.