I’ve been burying myself in researching the x402 sector these past few days. When I finally looked up—the market had completely collapsed.
I’ve been holding back a lot, but I need to say it:
The market has already entered a bear phase; stop lying to yourself. After that TRUMP wave, liquidity was basically sucked dry. Those little rebounds that followed? Just emotions propping things up.
Altcoins have been carrying debt since the day of TGE. Those die-hard holders from before? Gone. The steady, contributing developers? Scattered. What’s left now? Airdrop hunters cashing out like crazy, VCs rushing for the exit, exchanges raking in fees non-stop, and project teams who’ve been waiting years just trying to make a quick buck—everyone’s looking for an exit. Here’s the problem: who’s left to hold the bag?
MEME coins were once seen as a lifeline. They did serve their purpose—becoming a weapon for retail investors against high-FDV VC coins. But with zero technical barriers, so-called “fair launches,” and a conveyor belt of mass-produced copies, these things simply can’t support long-term value. Without the VC coin narrative of tech innovation from 0 to 1, MEMEs are just pure PVP zero-sum games. The end result? The entire industry gets eaten away.
What were exchanges supposed to do? Absorb on-chain innovation overflow and amplify liquidity. But once platforms like Pumpfun, GMGN, and Hyperliquid showed up, the wealth effect was so strong that exchanges panicked and started “internalizing” to save themselves. If the shovel-sellers start mining for gold, what’s the point of the gold rush business?
Builders are really suffering right now. Why are so many projects lining up for TGE? Why does nobody want to slowly polish their products? Why does all the blame for market imbalance fall on project teams and VCs? It’s too complicated—no one can give a standard answer. But the bankruptcy and flight of crypto builders and VCs is already a foregone conclusion. What’s scarier than liquidation and going to zero is when the industry is completely gutted, leaving nothing behind.
If I keep writing, this will just turn into a rant.
But this is exactly why I keep calling for on-chain innovation. Our crypto industry is nothing like the bold, spirited space it once was. It’s sick, it’s old, maybe even terminally ill.
Only a new, ground-up, tech innovation-driven on-chain narrative can reset everything.
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BankruptWorker
· 12-04 02:51
A bear market is fine, I already cashed out a long time ago, haha. It's wild to see who's still buying MEME coins now.
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WalletInspector
· 12-04 02:35
Liquidity has dried up, people are losing confidence, and it's getting hard to lead the team.
The bear market has arrived, and the industry is critically ill: only on-chain innovation can save the day.
I’ve been burying myself in researching the x402 sector these past few days. When I finally looked up—the market had completely collapsed.
I’ve been holding back a lot, but I need to say it:
The market has already entered a bear phase; stop lying to yourself. After that TRUMP wave, liquidity was basically sucked dry. Those little rebounds that followed? Just emotions propping things up.
Altcoins have been carrying debt since the day of TGE. Those die-hard holders from before? Gone. The steady, contributing developers? Scattered. What’s left now? Airdrop hunters cashing out like crazy, VCs rushing for the exit, exchanges raking in fees non-stop, and project teams who’ve been waiting years just trying to make a quick buck—everyone’s looking for an exit. Here’s the problem: who’s left to hold the bag?
MEME coins were once seen as a lifeline. They did serve their purpose—becoming a weapon for retail investors against high-FDV VC coins. But with zero technical barriers, so-called “fair launches,” and a conveyor belt of mass-produced copies, these things simply can’t support long-term value. Without the VC coin narrative of tech innovation from 0 to 1, MEMEs are just pure PVP zero-sum games. The end result? The entire industry gets eaten away.
What were exchanges supposed to do? Absorb on-chain innovation overflow and amplify liquidity. But once platforms like Pumpfun, GMGN, and Hyperliquid showed up, the wealth effect was so strong that exchanges panicked and started “internalizing” to save themselves. If the shovel-sellers start mining for gold, what’s the point of the gold rush business?
Builders are really suffering right now. Why are so many projects lining up for TGE? Why does nobody want to slowly polish their products? Why does all the blame for market imbalance fall on project teams and VCs? It’s too complicated—no one can give a standard answer. But the bankruptcy and flight of crypto builders and VCs is already a foregone conclusion. What’s scarier than liquidation and going to zero is when the industry is completely gutted, leaving nothing behind.
If I keep writing, this will just turn into a rant.
But this is exactly why I keep calling for on-chain innovation. Our crypto industry is nothing like the bold, spirited space it once was. It’s sick, it’s old, maybe even terminally ill.
Only a new, ground-up, tech innovation-driven on-chain narrative can reset everything.