There is a particularly heartbreaking phenomenon about playing memecoin: I often hear the phrase "Your taste is not good enough." This statement is so clever that it can almost be applied to all scenarios.
The logic is simple—if it has risen, your taste is good enough; the popular coins everyone is in are considered to have good taste; if it has fallen or you missed this wave, then your taste is immediately deemed insufficient. 😅
What's even more amusing is that behind this, many people's true thoughts are hidden: they are afraid of having to take over the position, and first need to "train" others' taste. Watching the trend while giving lessons to those who didn't follow the trend, as if participation level and aesthetic standards are positively correlated.
In plain terms, the memecoin market is such an ecosystem—when your choice makes money, it shows insight; when it doesn't rise or falls, it becomes a matter of taste. A true reflection of market psychology.
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GateUser-9f682d4c
· 13h ago
That's a real gut punch—just self-soothing for the bagholders.
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SmartContractPlumber
· 01-22 10:58
Basically, it's just talk. When prices go up, it's called aesthetics; when they go down, it's still the fault of aesthetics. The bagholders love this kind of excuse.
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OffchainWinner
· 01-22 10:47
This is just ridiculous. When it goes up, it's about aesthetics; when it goes down, it's about low aesthetics. Honestly, it's all just a money-making activity.
Well said, it's all just bagholders playing word games.
It's truly incredible—making money makes you a master, losing money makes you a fool.
That's how memecoin is—whoever wins has taste.
Lacking aesthetic sense? Actually, it just means they haven't made money.
Laugh out loud, those who make money are all aesthetes.
This kind of rhetoric is really everywhere; those losing money need brainwashing.
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AirDropMissed
· 01-22 10:41
It's a narrative of all winners; no one admits to failing to buy the dip.
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BearMarketSurvivor
· 01-22 10:40
This is a typical after-the-fact tactic: when you make a profit, you boast about your keen insight; when you lose, you blame others for poor judgment. It's entirely a one-way supply line logic.
There is a particularly heartbreaking phenomenon about playing memecoin: I often hear the phrase "Your taste is not good enough." This statement is so clever that it can almost be applied to all scenarios.
The logic is simple—if it has risen, your taste is good enough; the popular coins everyone is in are considered to have good taste; if it has fallen or you missed this wave, then your taste is immediately deemed insufficient. 😅
What's even more amusing is that behind this, many people's true thoughts are hidden: they are afraid of having to take over the position, and first need to "train" others' taste. Watching the trend while giving lessons to those who didn't follow the trend, as if participation level and aesthetic standards are positively correlated.
In plain terms, the memecoin market is such an ecosystem—when your choice makes money, it shows insight; when it doesn't rise or falls, it becomes a matter of taste. A true reflection of market psychology.