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#Strategy加仓BTC Last night, almost everyone at the square was watching a well-known figure's live stream, with questions popping up one after another on the screen—
"Is there still hope for altcoins?"
The more aggressively this question is asked, the more painful the answer becomes: fewer and fewer people truly believe.
Funding stories can no longer hold sway.
Two years ago, just adding a bunch of big funds to the funding list could make a project go viral. Now? With the same lineup of investors, all they can say after listening is:
"How do you make money?"
Without real revenue, it's just rounds of fundraising and PPT beautification. To put it plainly, the ship is leaking. When the wind was strong before, no one paid attention; now that the wind has stopped, the holes are glaring.
The market never lies.
Real money is already voting—rather than following VC projects that preach "long-termism," it might be more exciting to gamble on Meme coins.
This isn't a question of right or wrong, but the cruelest market rule:
When the show ends, only the survivors are true players.
After more than ten years, we’ve come full circle back to the starting point.
Big investors still cling tightly to $BTC, $ETH, these safe havens.
But retail investors wanting to turn things around have already squeezed into the Meme coin path—high volatility, low participation barriers, and emotions directly translating into value.
VC-funded projects?
They're gradually moving from the spotlight to the shadows.
To tell you the truth in the end:
The market is always changing, but you need to hold onto one thing:
Understand what you're investing in, and be clear about how much decline you can withstand.
Those who can persist until the end this round may not be the ones with the flashiest story,
but they are definitely the ones who grasp the rhythm most steadily.
What do you think about this phenomenon? Whether you agree or have different ideas, let’s chat some real talk in the comments.