There has been a question lingering in my mind: Is Bitcoin truly an investment asset, or is it a collective scam that everyone is participating in?
Let's start with the most straightforward phenomenon. Over ten years ago, it was a few dollars each; now it has risen to six figures. This story is told every day. But the problem with this story is—it always implies that you "missed out," encouraging you to "get in now." Those who bought early made profits, new entrants are just taking over. When will this chain break? No one can say for sure. How can you be certain that you won't be the last bagholder?
Next, consider the mining design. Satoshi Nakamoto set the difficulty to increase over time, and the total supply is capped. It sounds very scarce, right? But think the other way around—higher difficulty means more people need to invest money, attracting more capital into the market. It's like a carefully designed funnel. The problem is, the market's capacity is limited. When the bubble inflates to a certain point, it will naturally burst.
Finally, there's the ecological issue. In the crypto market, there is no real dividend mechanism; stocks at least have dividend rights. All coins are under the control of manipulators, and transaction fees are still collected. Why should you be sure that you can make money from the manipulators? A more realistic question is—why are you sure that you are the one who will profit?
Perhaps we need to reflect: what should be the essence of Bitcoin? Is it merely a speculative tool, or does it truly hold other value?
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
15 Likes
Reward
15
6
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
WalletsWatcher
· 11h ago
To put it simply, it's a hot potato game—whoever is slow loses.
View OriginalReply0
ChainWanderingPoet
· 11h ago
Your logic loophole is huge, just like pyramid scheme talk.
View OriginalReply0
ZkSnarker
· 12h ago
ngl the "design is a funnel" take hits different when you actually trace the math... well technically, satoshi just made scarcity economics 101 into code lmao
Reply0
LiquidityWitch
· 12h ago
Really? I've been pondering this issue for a long time, and you're not wrong.
Early entrants definitely made a killing, but entering at this price level... who can guarantee they're not the last to take the fall?
The big players are truly everywhere, and the transaction fees are extremely high.
View OriginalReply0
DegenDreamer
· 12h ago
To be honest, the term "bagholder" hit me... but I'm still playing, it's just so contradictory.
View OriginalReply0
RektHunter
· 12h ago
Huh, this logical loophole is pretty big.
Basically, it's still asking whether you can make quick money.
There has been a question lingering in my mind: Is Bitcoin truly an investment asset, or is it a collective scam that everyone is participating in?
Let's start with the most straightforward phenomenon. Over ten years ago, it was a few dollars each; now it has risen to six figures. This story is told every day. But the problem with this story is—it always implies that you "missed out," encouraging you to "get in now." Those who bought early made profits, new entrants are just taking over. When will this chain break? No one can say for sure. How can you be certain that you won't be the last bagholder?
Next, consider the mining design. Satoshi Nakamoto set the difficulty to increase over time, and the total supply is capped. It sounds very scarce, right? But think the other way around—higher difficulty means more people need to invest money, attracting more capital into the market. It's like a carefully designed funnel. The problem is, the market's capacity is limited. When the bubble inflates to a certain point, it will naturally burst.
Finally, there's the ecological issue. In the crypto market, there is no real dividend mechanism; stocks at least have dividend rights. All coins are under the control of manipulators, and transaction fees are still collected. Why should you be sure that you can make money from the manipulators? A more realistic question is—why are you sure that you are the one who will profit?
Perhaps we need to reflect: what should be the essence of Bitcoin? Is it merely a speculative tool, or does it truly hold other value?