People caught up in chasing rallies often fixate on one metric—like ZET hitting $20—and miss the bigger picture of what Zetarium is actually building.
The project isn't boxing itself into a single narrative. Instead, it's laying groundwork across multiple fronts:
First, there's the infrastructure angle—the backbone enabling other things to exist. Then you've got the ecosystem layer, where the protocol becomes a central hub for various applications and participants. And crucially, it's positioned as community-driven, meaning governance and direction flow from the network itself rather than top-down.
Projects that stick around in crypto tend to follow this pattern: cast a wide net, establish themselves across different roles, then accelerate. Narrow focus might grab attention fast, but broad positioning tends to have longer staying power.
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.
10 Likes
Reward
10
4
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
RektRecovery
· 14h ago
nah this is exactly the playbook every project claims right before the rug... "community-driven governance" lmao, we've seen this movie. broad positioning just means they haven't decided what to actually do yet tbh
Reply0
down_only_larry
· 14h ago
To be honest, that's why most people end up losing everything... There are just too many fools who only focus on price fluctuations.
View OriginalReply0
SocialFiQueen
· 14h ago
Oh dear, it's another bunch of people who only look at the price and not the project, fixated on the number $20. It's really too funny.
View OriginalReply0
BTCBeliefStation
· 14h ago
It's the same story again... No matter how broad the coverage, someone has to pay the bill. The three main pillars—Infrastructure, Ecosystem, and Community—have been the main focus for so many years.
People caught up in chasing rallies often fixate on one metric—like ZET hitting $20—and miss the bigger picture of what Zetarium is actually building.
The project isn't boxing itself into a single narrative. Instead, it's laying groundwork across multiple fronts:
First, there's the infrastructure angle—the backbone enabling other things to exist. Then you've got the ecosystem layer, where the protocol becomes a central hub for various applications and participants. And crucially, it's positioned as community-driven, meaning governance and direction flow from the network itself rather than top-down.
Projects that stick around in crypto tend to follow this pattern: cast a wide net, establish themselves across different roles, then accelerate. Narrow focus might grab attention fast, but broad positioning tends to have longer staying power.