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In 2026, at the very start, Chinese Meme coins have already caused a stir in the market—on short video platforms, the phrase "My 2026 auspicious sign" became a viral sensation, leading to the emergence of a virtual currency of the same name. People in the community are quite skilled at playing with memes: "Drawing the auspicious sign doubles your wealth!" What’s different this time is that meme culture has completely bypassed traditional exchange discourse and has taken root directly within the short video ecosystem, combining mysticism, trends, and emotional resonance, spreading naturally.
Speaking of the power of Meme coins, a major exchange launched a similar project last year that achieved a 6000x increase, fully demonstrating the potential of Chinese narratives in the global market. The "Auspicious Sign" takes it a step further—it uses cultural crossover to open new ideas. If 2025 was the "awakening" of Chinese Meme, then 2026 looks to be the year of "ecological explosion." A certain public blockchain quickly followed suit by launching derivative tokens, and the Solana community is also actively discussing collaboration plans. Major blockchains are clearly intensifying their competition to attract Eastern traffic.
However, there are some warning signs behind this wave of enthusiasm. Short video platforms have explicitly banned content related to virtual currency trading, and recently, a batch of violating accounts have been shut down. More concerning is that projects like "Auspicious Sign" mostly haven't undergone smart contract audits, posing risks of market manipulation. If the hype remains purely emotional without real application scenarios—such as charity or gaming empowerment—it’s doomed to be a fleeting phenomenon.
The true future of Chinese Meme coins should be a combination of cultural heritage and technological accumulation. The next wave of real winners will likely be projects that understand how to play with memes while creating tangible value.
Wait, the contract audit hasn't passed? Then you need to be careful, the smell of a Ponzi scheme is too strong.
Meme culture is meme culture, but without practical application scenarios, it really can't last long.
All the short video platforms have banned it, yet they still dare to push? You can't gamble on regulation.
I feel like you should find something that has both cultural heritage and practical use to survive longer.
This wave of hype is quite suitable for pulling the wool over people's eyes, everyone be careful.
Only those with real applications are worth paying attention to, otherwise it's just a big pie.
Superstition plus hype, I think it's over, don't overestimate it.
The fleeting ending has already been written, whoever gets in is the bag-holder.
Promising to focus on cultural heritage, but it still ends up being a gamble on a Ponzi scheme. The tricks haven't changed.
Shang Shang Qian Huo is popular, but once the platform gets banned, it's over. How long this wave can last is really uncertain.
Playing with memes is fine, but daring to rush without an audit? Isn't that gambling, brother?
Short videos being banned means game over; don't get caught off guard.
The "Good Fortune" sounds very mystical, but if there's nothing on-chain, it's just an air coin.
This wave of Eastern traffic competition looks lively, but how many can really make money?
Chinese narrative has an advantage, but only if it's not all hype, right?
I really don't dare to touch contracts without audits; the risk is too high.
Only projects with application scenarios can survive; purely emotional trading will inevitably be fleeting.
Breaking meme culture out of its circle is interesting, but it needs real backing, everyone.
Daring to promote without an audit, aren't they just asking for death?
6000x is survivor bias; there are probably more buried projects.
Culture + technology is the real way; right now, these are all just air.
People still play short videos after accounts are banned, really not afraid.
The so-called metaphysical empowerment is hilarious; it's still the same old套路.
Waiting to see another "ephemeral flower."
Understanding memes doesn't mean understanding coins; most people have it backwards.
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Have you heard of the 6000x story? Now it's our turn for the Chinese Meme to turn the tide
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What’s the point of auditing? Scammers are already making crazy money on short videos, and you're still sticking to those rules
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The problem is most people just want to make quick money. Who really wants to build an ecosystem?
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Solana is riding the trend; East Asian traffic equals money
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Wait, this thing hasn't been audited? I need to observe first
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Meme culture bypasses exchanges and goes straight to short videos—definitely a new idea, but it also comes with high risks
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The real winners are those with stories and real-world applications. Pure emotional hype will cool off sooner or later
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The wave of account bans is a signal—regulation is coming
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Guess whether the next 6000x will also be in Chinese
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Metaphysics, memes, and emotions—this combo is indeed powerful, but what about its sustainability?
No audit on the contract, just rushing in—that's not a gambler, that's a fool.
The ban on short videos should have happened long ago; virtual currency marketing needs regulation.
Cultural heritage? Ha, nice words, but actually it's just the market makers coming up with new ways to fleece retail investors.
Memecoin with no real application, in three months no one will even remember the name.
Playing with memes is fine, but don't use mysticism as investment proof, brother.
If the top sign gets popular, it can only go up—that logic is simply brilliant.
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It's the short video ecosystem again, and the metaphysical meme. It feels like this wave is just the prelude to a harvest of the chives.
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Daring to play without an audit? I'll wait and see who becomes the negative example first.
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Playing with memes is fine, but I really don't dare to touch coins without practical application value; it's too虚 (虚 means虚空, empty or虚拟, virtual).
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Chinese narrative indeed has potential, but the problem is how to distinguish which projects are genuine and which are scams.
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Drawing the top sign and doubling your wealth, I don't believe you, next second you'll be cut.
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Is Solana really following up? This means the competition for traffic between East and West is about to heat up.
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Short video platforms are starting to ban accounts, yet they still dare to openly promote coins. Isn't this inviting trouble?
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It seems that the real winners this time will be projects with practical applications; purely炒梗 (chao geng, hype or meme projects) die quickly.
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The most painful part is the risk of market manipulation. 99% of meme coins probably can't escape this fate.