Breaking news! A major public chain's ecosystem foundation has recently made a big move, investing $200,000 USD within two days to enter the market, targeting four Chinese meme coins.
According to on-chain data, the foundation invested $50,000 USD in each of these four projects. Among them, the "Hajime" coin has a relatively low price, and with the same $50,000 investment, it received 1.3 million tokens; meanwhile, the "Laozi" coin is priced higher, and the same $50,000 only bought 4.7 million tokens. Additionally, "I Came on My Horse" and another coin also received $50,000 USD support each.
This move has indeed attracted a lot of attention in the community. It turns out that these ecosystem funds usually focus only on top-tier projects, but now they are actually putting real money into network culture-themed coins, clearly signaling goodwill toward the Chinese community and aiming to turn internet memes directly into on-chain assets.
After the news broke, these coins immediately responded, with many jumping in to follow suit. But whether this investment is a long-term strategic layout favored by the foundation or just a short-term marketing stunt remains unclear.
What do you think? Among these four coins, which one do you believe has the most potential? Which meme can be played with the most creativity?
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PancakeFlippa
· 4h ago
The foundation's recent moves are a bit interesting, but I feel like it's just preheating before cutting the leeks.
Looking at this coin's data, it seems strange—high price with low token collection, feels like liquidity is worrying.
HakiMi's low unit price actually collects more tokens, this logic doesn't quite add up, everyone.
Meme coins are just meme coins, don't talk about long-term strategies here, it's hilarious.
The Chinese community is indeed a gold mine, but it's also the easiest place to cut the leeks.
"I'm coming, damn it"—I see some vitality in this name.
Four coins split over fifty thousand yuan, this choice seems a bit random, not like a well-thought-out plan.
Wait, does this fund really have that much idle money to invest randomly, or is there another purpose?
By the way, what's the current price of these four coins? It doesn't seem to have much of a rise.
Meme coin hype cycles are short; don't overestimate the value of this stuff.
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ImpermanentTherapist
· 01-11 14:48
Hakimi, I think it's uncertain. Funds usually have backup plans when pouring money in.
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Wait, is this a bottom-fishing move or genuine optimism? Feels a bit like a marketing gimmick.
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That meme about me is hilarious, really pushing the boundaries.
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Fifty thousand yuan split into four parts, this move is a bit cautious. Are they really not optimistic or just testing the waters?
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My coin is so expensive, and the foundation dares to make a move? Okay, okay.
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Honestly, I bet 1.3 million Hakimi tokens will be dumped first.
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Another internet meme coin and an ecosystem fund—I've seen this combo many times.
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Short-term is definitely marketing, but who knows about the long term?
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The cost of holding 1.3 million tokens is only 50,000? That's way too cheap for this stake.
View OriginalReply0
FastLeaver
· 01-11 14:45
I knew the fund also started playing with memes, this thing is really strange.
My coin name is just perfect, throwing 50,000 down and only getting 4.7 million tokens, feels like someone is trying to cut the leeks.
"I'm coming" is truly a traffic magnet, this meme never gets old.
Hakeem's unit price is ridiculously cheap, be careful, it might be a Ponzi scheme, everyone.
Honestly, investing 200,000 USD, rather than calling it a strategy, it looks more like a marketing stunt to ride the trend.
Would a real foundation do this? Directly invest 50,000 in four projects? You wouldn't believe it if I told you.
I bet the foundation will run away in three months, and these coins will revert to their original form.
That 1.3 million Hakeem tokens are just too exaggerated, this splash looks like a casino.
Short-term following the trend is okay, but I advise against holding long-term.
Isn't this just trying to get the Chinese community to take the bait? The tactics are indeed clever.
View OriginalReply0
GasFeeAssassin
· 01-11 14:45
Hakimi's data is outrageous, directly taking 1.3 million tokens for $50,000? This premium logic doesn't seem quite right.
The more expensive the price, the fewer tokens there are—could it really be something genuine or just a pure scam?
Damn, this meme is really playable, but I'm just worried the fund is here to scam the little guys.
The foundation's move claims to be optimistic about the Chinese community, but I'm half skeptical. Anyway, I don't dare to hold a heavy position in meme coins.
Wait, you only mentioned three coins out of four? What's the other coin? Sneaking around?
I've seen too many marketing tricks like this—throwing 200,000 in two days and immediately someone follows suit. How it will develop later really depends on the fund's subsequent actions.
Hakimi's premium is too aggressive, feeling like a dump is coming—better to be cautious.
This coin actually looks more stable to me, but who knows?
I usually avoid meme coins online; the risk is too high unless there's solid fundamentals backing it.
This move is really clever—first spend money to create buzz, then watch retail investors follow, while the fund sits back and profits.
How long meme coins can stay popular is still uncertain. Those entering now are just gambling on the fund's continued investment.
View OriginalReply0
WalletAnxietyPatient
· 01-11 14:34
The fund throws money around, if it can pump the price I’ll join, if not it’s just harvesting retail investors
I feel like this coin is about to take off, a high price often means someone is manipulating expectations
Damn, this name is absolutely brilliant, the meme is just powerful enough
This round is really hard to judge, it could crash tomorrow, or it could be a hundredfold coin, just take a gamble
The foundation is also starting to play with memes, they are indeed bowing and scraping to the Chinese community
Hakiimi is ridiculously cheap, but cheap things usually die the fastest
It still depends on whether there will be real applications later; a meme coin without substance won’t last long
Everyone is waiting for a crash, once this money is sold, it’s all over
View OriginalReply0
LiquidationWatcher
· 01-11 14:23
ngl this smells like a pump before the dump... been there, lost that. 20万进四个meme币?health factor getting real thin real quick
Breaking news! A major public chain's ecosystem foundation has recently made a big move, investing $200,000 USD within two days to enter the market, targeting four Chinese meme coins.
According to on-chain data, the foundation invested $50,000 USD in each of these four projects. Among them, the "Hajime" coin has a relatively low price, and with the same $50,000 investment, it received 1.3 million tokens; meanwhile, the "Laozi" coin is priced higher, and the same $50,000 only bought 4.7 million tokens. Additionally, "I Came on My Horse" and another coin also received $50,000 USD support each.
This move has indeed attracted a lot of attention in the community. It turns out that these ecosystem funds usually focus only on top-tier projects, but now they are actually putting real money into network culture-themed coins, clearly signaling goodwill toward the Chinese community and aiming to turn internet memes directly into on-chain assets.
After the news broke, these coins immediately responded, with many jumping in to follow suit. But whether this investment is a long-term strategic layout favored by the foundation or just a short-term marketing stunt remains unclear.
What do you think? Among these four coins, which one do you believe has the most potential? Which meme can be played with the most creativity?