From blessings to assets, this wave of Chinese internet culture gameplay is quite intense.



The "sign" that was shared across the entire internet at the beginning of the year has now become a trading object on the chain. Sharp-eyed crypto users have packaged folk ritualistic sentiment into Meme coins, instantly bridging the two worlds of emotion and trading—good luck is no longer just psychological suggestion; it has become something that can be stored in a wallet.

The logic behind this is actually quite interesting. On one side is the class imagination of "defying the heavens and changing fate," and on the other side is an obsession with randomness. People both crave certainty in destiny and are attracted to unpredictable possibilities. Meme just happens to capture this contradiction, concretizing, tradable, and transmissible the abstract concept of good luck, forcibly turning a cultural symbol into a community asset.

Looking at recent moves by public chains like Base and Solana, it’s clear—where the traffic flows, capital narratives follow. The competition for Chinese-speaking users is no longer just about changing interfaces or finding a few spokespersons; now it must delve into the core of meme culture and fight a "localization" hard battle.

But there are also risks involved. After each frenzy, a batch of projects turns to dust. Assets built purely on emotion and lacking fundamentals may collapse once liquidity shifts. Those fleeting Meme cases are actually a warning bell for later entrants.

The true test of Chinese Meme is not how many "signs" can be created, but whether someone can truly realize this "sign" into long-term, tangible value. Cultural memes are just an entry ticket; real retention depends on solid, substantial things.

Note: The above content is only an observation of market phenomena and cultural trends and does not constitute any investment advice. Cryptocurrency assets are highly volatile, with the risk of complete loss of principal. Invest rationally and cautiously.
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AlgoAlchemistvip
· 01-09 01:33
To be honest, the luck coin scheme has been overdue for a long time.

How long can emotions alone sustain it? Just look at those that have gone to zero to know.
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ZKProofstervip
· 01-07 14:48
technically speaking, tokenizing good luck is just... repackaging randomness with better marketing. the "proof" here is purely social consensus, not cryptographic. 🤔
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DegenGamblervip
· 01-07 14:47
Another new trick to cut leeks, I was wondering why there are so many "signed" coins lately.
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GasFeeNightmarevip
· 01-07 14:43
Late at night, checking the market on the gas tracker again. I calculated the liquidity of this wave of meme coins, and I really can't withstand another dump.

Want to buy the dip but afraid of being cut, this is my daily routine.

That's right, if there's no fundamentals, it will eventually go to zero. I lost two ETH worth of gas fees before doing this.

Cultural memes can attract traffic, but only a few can survive. I'm now just waiting to see who can turn this into a long-term project.
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SerumSurfervip
· 01-07 14:24
Playing Meme is gambling on human nature, but ultimately human nature is all in vain.
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ContractBugHuntervip
· 01-07 14:23
Another wave of schemes to harvest IQ taxes, almost writing "good luck" into the white paper.

Connecting emotions and trading? Basically, it's just gambler psychology.

I see that Base and Sol are mainly competing for Chinese-speaking users through liquidity; cultural packaging is just a cover.

Wait, this logic doesn't hold—Meme tokens without fundamentals can't sustain until the next bull market unless someone really steps up to take the final baton.

The lifecycle of emotional assets is just like that—more fragile than contract vulnerabilities.
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