The current market is absurd to the extreme. You can just casually throw out a token named "DOYR," and even when no one understands the logic, it can take off instantly. You know full well that it has no narrative, no team, no meaning—it doesn't even qualify as a meme. It's purely the result of stacked emotions, yet it still manages to pump. That's the most surreal part.
The more you study fundamentals, the more you realize it's useless; the more you try to figure out the rules, the more you realize there are no rules here. Sometimes it feels like the whole world is just waiting for an excuse to dive into the pool, and it doesn't matter whether that excuse is a joke, some pinyin, or a catchphrase—as long as it's light and fun, someone will bet on it.
That's just how this place is: absurdity isn't the exception, it's the norm. What's truly speechless isn't that these kinds of coins can pump, but that people knowingly follow in, acting even more absurdly.
If you call it strange, it's really not—it runs on emotion, not value. If you call it rational, it's totally irrational, yet it's somehow more lively than anything else.
This is the market we soak in every day: a joke can become a trend, a meme can turn into wealth. Absurd? Extremely absurd. Yet everyone willingly waits to see the next absurd thing happen.
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The current market is absurd to the extreme. You can just casually throw out a token named "DOYR," and even when no one understands the logic, it can take off instantly. You know full well that it has no narrative, no team, no meaning—it doesn't even qualify as a meme. It's purely the result of stacked emotions, yet it still manages to pump. That's the most surreal part.
The more you study fundamentals, the more you realize it's useless; the more you try to figure out the rules, the more you realize there are no rules here. Sometimes it feels like the whole world is just waiting for an excuse to dive into the pool, and it doesn't matter whether that excuse is a joke, some pinyin, or a catchphrase—as long as it's light and fun, someone will bet on it.
That's just how this place is: absurdity isn't the exception, it's the norm.
What's truly speechless isn't that these kinds of coins can pump, but that people knowingly follow in, acting even more absurdly.
If you call it strange, it's really not—it runs on emotion, not value.
If you call it rational, it's totally irrational, yet it's somehow more lively than anything else.
This is the market we soak in every day: a joke can become a trend, a meme can turn into wealth.
Absurd? Extremely absurd.
Yet everyone willingly waits to see the next absurd thing happen.