【BlockBeats】Recently, discussions about meme coins have suddenly reignited. One widely circulated opinion in the market is: “Meme coins are doomed.” But when you dig deeper, you’ll find that this is a typical case of taking things out of context.
Industry veterans have long provided more nuanced judgments: “Most meme coins won’t go very far, but meme coins with cultural value can exist long-term.” In other words, it’s not about pessimism towards all meme coins, but about making an objective market distinction—one-off meme coins that rely on quick gains will eventually be eliminated, while those with genuine community resonance and cultural accumulation may last longer.
This incident reflects an interesting phenomenon: rumors, hatred, and conspiracy theories always spread faster than the facts themselves. The most feared investors in the market are those who see a statement and rush to buy, acting on hearsay without verifying the original source for two minutes. What’s the result? They often become part of the group that suffers losses and keeps stepping into traps.
The market always tests people’s hearts. Investors who can remain rational and willing to do their homework often catch the right rhythm amid information chaos. Conversely, those who follow trends and are driven by emotions tend to fall into a vicious cycle of repeated losses.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
14 Likes
Reward
14
8
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
DecentralizeMe
· 1h ago
To be honest, I'm already numb to this kind of cherry-picked news, and it's always the same hype cycle.
The truly viable meme coins are indeed doing well, while those worthless tokens deserve to die.
The problem is the information gap is too wide; most retail investors simply can't tell who is who.
View OriginalReply0
AmateurDAOWatcher
· 14h ago
Here we go again? Every time it's praise followed by criticism, and in the end, you still have to verify. Trust me, memes with community warmth are true memes; those that die after a quick pump are long gone.
View OriginalReply0
OnchainSniper
· 15h ago
Basically, the market is once again playing "The Boy Who Cried Wolf," and every time, someone panics big time.
Memes with real value can survive; those without soul should have died long ago. That's common sense.
These people see a screenshot and go all-in immediately. I'm really speechless.
View OriginalReply0
P2ENotWorking
· 15h ago
Someone will fall for this trick, a headline scares everyone around, and they don't even think twice.
---
Having cultural accumulation leads to longevity; those who cut leeks (profit from others' losses) are damned. Isn't this just survival of the fittest?
---
It always happens like this—scare off a wave of leeks first, then move on. The tricks are all worn out.
---
Community strength is the real core; don't let a single sentence hijack your mind.
---
I really don't understand why some people still follow the wind and change their minds. Is two minutes of searching really too much trouble?
---
That's just how the meme ecosystem works: bad coins drive out good coins, then good coins slowly recover, cycle repeats.
---
No matter how good the jokes are, they can't stop the lack of popularity. Community is the key.
---
Lazy investors who don't bother to verify should be eliminated; this is market self-purification.
---
One sentence can trigger half the street; it really shows a worrying level of information literacy.
---
In the big waves, sand is sifted out—nothing surprising. Meme coins are actually part of this process.
View OriginalReply0
ZKProofster
· 15h ago
honestly the whole "meme coins are dead" discourse is just noise filtering itself out... the protocol's actually been pretty clear if you bother reading past the headlines. it's not binary—weak social layer gets pruned, actual community primitives stick around. basic market mechanics really. people who panic trade on soundbites deserve the liquidation imo
Reply0
rugpull_ptsd
· 15h ago
Alright, it's another clickbait scheme to harvest retail investors
Really good memes have already proven themselves; I don't care if shitcoins die or not
The key is just not letting the team run away, that's what I'm most worried about
People who just listen to rumors should learn a lesson
Memecoins with communities have vitality; just a pure rug warning is not enough
View OriginalReply0
AirdropDreamBreaker
· 15h ago
It's the same old spiel, and it's getting tiresome. Truly valuable memes have already surfaced, while the rest are just chips in a casino.
View OriginalReply0
staking_gramps
· 15h ago
Got it, it's another clickbait to grab attention. Good coins or bad coins, you still have to tell for yourself.
Are meme coins really going to fade out? You might be misled by rumors.
【BlockBeats】Recently, discussions about meme coins have suddenly reignited. One widely circulated opinion in the market is: “Meme coins are doomed.” But when you dig deeper, you’ll find that this is a typical case of taking things out of context.
Industry veterans have long provided more nuanced judgments: “Most meme coins won’t go very far, but meme coins with cultural value can exist long-term.” In other words, it’s not about pessimism towards all meme coins, but about making an objective market distinction—one-off meme coins that rely on quick gains will eventually be eliminated, while those with genuine community resonance and cultural accumulation may last longer.
This incident reflects an interesting phenomenon: rumors, hatred, and conspiracy theories always spread faster than the facts themselves. The most feared investors in the market are those who see a statement and rush to buy, acting on hearsay without verifying the original source for two minutes. What’s the result? They often become part of the group that suffers losses and keeps stepping into traps.
The market always tests people’s hearts. Investors who can remain rational and willing to do their homework often catch the right rhythm amid information chaos. Conversely, those who follow trends and are driven by emotions tend to fall into a vicious cycle of repeated losses.