In just two days, Kaito's staking rank dropped from 93 to 90, and its yield ranking also fell from 90 to 85. Many people might panic upon seeing these numbers, but the project's hardcore fans reacted surprisingly uniformly — no one is leaving.
Looking at it from another perspective, such a situation would have caused chaos in other projects. But the resilience of this community is unexpected. Many participants have already adjusted their mindset: from the moment they stake, they prepare for the worst-case scenario, accepting the possibility of losing their principal entirely.
What does this difference in mindset indicate? It shows that those who stay are truly people who deeply resonate with the project's logic. Staking is not about gambling psychology but a long-term commitment to the ecosystem. In this context, ranking fluctuations have instead become a tool for filtering participants.
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GasFeeNightmare
· 10h ago
Losing a few spots in the rankings and then crying and complaining—such coin holders should have been eliminated long ago.
True HODLers have already set their accounts to tomb mode and are lying flat, watching the show.
Only those who can accept zeroing out deserve to get ten times the coins.
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LayerZeroHero
· 10h ago
A decline in ranking has instead become a sieve, I accept this logic. The fact proves that those who truly understand the protocol architecture do not pay attention to short-term fluctuations.
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DataPickledFish
· 10h ago
Those who want to leave early when the ranking drops have already been washed out; those who stay are true believers.
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FloorSweeper
· 10h ago
nah this is just capitulation theater honestly. paper hands panic-selling while the real accumulators stay put... classic market psychology play. seen this pattern a thousand times before, weak signals always shake out first. kaito's probably testing floor support rn, if nobody's actually leaving that's actually bullish af for the ones who understand the macro picture here.
In just two days, Kaito's staking rank dropped from 93 to 90, and its yield ranking also fell from 90 to 85. Many people might panic upon seeing these numbers, but the project's hardcore fans reacted surprisingly uniformly — no one is leaving.
Looking at it from another perspective, such a situation would have caused chaos in other projects. But the resilience of this community is unexpected. Many participants have already adjusted their mindset: from the moment they stake, they prepare for the worst-case scenario, accepting the possibility of losing their principal entirely.
What does this difference in mindset indicate? It shows that those who stay are truly people who deeply resonate with the project's logic. Staking is not about gambling psychology but a long-term commitment to the ecosystem. In this context, ranking fluctuations have instead become a tool for filtering participants.