I just recently realized an interesting phenomenon: a friend who usually never pays attention to stocks or the crypto world suddenly reached out to me today and asked, "Is there still hope for the crypto circle?" This question caught me a bit off guard and made me both amused and speechless.
Thinking about it, it makes sense. The fact that outsiders are starting to pay attention and raise such questions indicates that the market has indeed experienced something. It's not just project teams hyping up their own gains and losses, but genuinely attracting the attention and concern of ordinary people.
This also made me reflect: the vitality of an industry is sometimes not measured by how fanatic its believers are, but by how rational the doubts are. From its wild growth to today, every time someone asks, "Is there still hope?" it’s a process of market self-correction. Improved regulation, technological iteration, application implementation—all these are driving the industry toward maturity.
In fact, this question from my friend, to some extent, shows that the public has started to view cryptocurrencies with a more rational perspective. This is not necessarily a bad thing for the long-term development of the industry.
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pvt_key_collector
· 01-13 08:03
Hopeless or not, it all depends on who comes to save the day.
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When outsiders start asking this question, it's actually a sign, indicating that everyone is really starting to think.
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My friend suddenly asked me this, and I was stunned too, showing that something indeed went wrong.
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Instead of asking whether there's a rescue, it's better to ask yourself if you can still hold on.
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Are more doubts actually a good thing? Ha, I need to think about this logic.
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This is called moving from an expanding market to a shrinking market; ordinary people are starting to pay attention.
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Wait, the question is whether questioning the reasoning is a good sign? Then, is my all-in strategy too irrational?
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GasFeeLady
· 01-13 08:02
honestly when normies start asking "is crypto dead" that's actually the exact moment you wanna be watching gas metrics... that's when real moves happen, not when everyone's shitposting abt lambos, ngl
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LiquidityWizard
· 01-13 07:52
Haha, what's the point of saving? It's already rotten to the core, still trying to save it.
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This is the real bottom signal; outsiders are starting to ask this question.
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Sounds good, but it's actually just wave after wave of liquidation.
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Rational skepticism? Wake up, it's just panic.
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I've been asked too, just tell them not to touch it and that's it.
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The crypto world is always "self-correcting," and the correction leaves me completely wiped out.
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Everyone in my social circle is starting to ask this, it's quite interesting... Is this a signal for the next wave to start?
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Regulation improvement? Ha, I think it's more like being completely stifled.
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Normal people's attention = the big bottom? I know this logic well; every time I get caught.
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Talking about rationality, it's just because the losses are too heavy that they ask.
I just recently realized an interesting phenomenon: a friend who usually never pays attention to stocks or the crypto world suddenly reached out to me today and asked, "Is there still hope for the crypto circle?" This question caught me a bit off guard and made me both amused and speechless.
Thinking about it, it makes sense. The fact that outsiders are starting to pay attention and raise such questions indicates that the market has indeed experienced something. It's not just project teams hyping up their own gains and losses, but genuinely attracting the attention and concern of ordinary people.
This also made me reflect: the vitality of an industry is sometimes not measured by how fanatic its believers are, but by how rational the doubts are. From its wild growth to today, every time someone asks, "Is there still hope?" it’s a process of market self-correction. Improved regulation, technological iteration, application implementation—all these are driving the industry toward maturity.
In fact, this question from my friend, to some extent, shows that the public has started to view cryptocurrencies with a more rational perspective. This is not necessarily a bad thing for the long-term development of the industry.