Take a look at the recent market environment. Liquidity is clearly warming up, and funds are pouring into the meme sector. Whether it's mainstream high-market-cap memes on exchanges or new projects emerging from the community, the overall upper and lower limits of the entire sector are gradually rising.
This time window is very interesting. If supported by leading platforms and mainstream public chain ecosystems, Chinese memes may not necessarily become a new narrative, but at least they can fill existing gaps. By then, perhaps a market pattern will form where English memes and Chinese memes each have their own characteristics and complement each other—on the west side, the classic dog culture; on the east side, the emerging cat narrative, each with its own players and traffic. Such differentiation is actually beneficial for the entire ecosystem.
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FloorSweeper
· 01-07 10:23
Dog culture vs. cat narrative, haha, that's a perfect analogy... But can Chinese memes really take off? Currently, it still feels a bit uncertain.
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WhaleMistaker
· 01-06 11:39
Chinese memes need ecological support to rise; popularity alone isn't enough.
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OnChainDetective
· 01-04 18:56
Wait a minute, is this wave of liquidity recovery truly a natural rebound or is some big whale secretly laying the groundwork? I just took a quick look at on-chain data, and the sources of those sudden inflows into meme tokens need to be thoroughly investigated...
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ReverseTradingGuru
· 01-04 18:46
Damn, can Chinese memes really take off? It still feels too niche.
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GasGasGasBro
· 01-04 18:44
Dog culture vs. cat narrative, this division of ideas is quite interesting, but can the domestic market really take over?
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MEVHunter_9000
· 01-04 18:38
Chinese memes are really gaining traction, it all depends on who can get support from the leading platforms first.
Dogs and cats are competing fiercely, and this market will be even bigger.
Liquidity recovery is the foundation; relying solely on narratives without money flowing in is pointless.
Everyone rushing now is making a killing, but what happens next depends on luck.
The cat narrative sounds good, but can it really break out of the circle? Or is it just hype?
Chinese memes are taking off, and airdrop enthusiasts are about to celebrate again haha.
Filling the gaps sounds nice, but in reality, it still depends on whether capital is willing to invest money.
I respect this logic; ecological differentiation is indeed a good thing.
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GasFeeCrybaby
· 01-04 18:33
Liquidity warming up is obvious to everyone, but no one knows how long the hype will last.
Can Chinese memes catch on? It still feels like the English ones are more popular.
Listening to cat narratives sounds good, but does anyone really buy into it? Haha.
Can this wave of meme hype last until next year? It feels like another round of liquidation.
Wait, are there really platforms supporting Chinese projects? I haven't seen any movement.
If the track lifts, it lifts. Anyway, I'm just riding the trend.
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RetroHodler91
· 01-04 18:29
Wow, is the Chinese meme really about to take off? Dogs and cats divide the world, I love this narrative.
Take a look at the recent market environment. Liquidity is clearly warming up, and funds are pouring into the meme sector. Whether it's mainstream high-market-cap memes on exchanges or new projects emerging from the community, the overall upper and lower limits of the entire sector are gradually rising.
This time window is very interesting. If supported by leading platforms and mainstream public chain ecosystems, Chinese memes may not necessarily become a new narrative, but at least they can fill existing gaps. By then, perhaps a market pattern will form where English memes and Chinese memes each have their own characteristics and complement each other—on the west side, the classic dog culture; on the east side, the emerging cat narrative, each with its own players and traffic. Such differentiation is actually beneficial for the entire ecosystem.