Back when I was deep into crypto, I genuinely believed that widespread asset ownership would push mainstream platforms like Steam and Epic Games to embrace blockchain technology at scale. Turns out, the dynamics played out differently. Those early-stage believers who caught massive gains now chase quick returns on every new opportunity. The result? Your timeline gets flooded with ponzi schemes while legitimate tech solutions struggle for attention and adoption. It's become a vicious cycle—when fortunes are already made, the incentive to build responsibly gets shelved in favor of chasing the next quick flip.
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zkProofGremlin
· 01-18 16:28
Honestly, early believers made a lot of money and then started to dump, it's really not interesting.
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VibesOverCharts
· 01-18 13:40
Early believers made a fortune and then started to cut the leeks. I'm too familiar with this trick.
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MercilessHalal
· 01-15 17:57
Isn't this human nature? When you have money, who still wants to take it slow?
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LightningClicker
· 01-15 17:54
Early believers started to cut leeks after making money, which is really quite ironic.
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WenMoon
· 01-15 17:39
Early believers made their money and ran, leaving us to eat shit. This circle is really rotten to the core.
Back when I was deep into crypto, I genuinely believed that widespread asset ownership would push mainstream platforms like Steam and Epic Games to embrace blockchain technology at scale. Turns out, the dynamics played out differently. Those early-stage believers who caught massive gains now chase quick returns on every new opportunity. The result? Your timeline gets flooded with ponzi schemes while legitimate tech solutions struggle for attention and adoption. It's become a vicious cycle—when fortunes are already made, the incentive to build responsibly gets shelved in favor of chasing the next quick flip.