The meme supercycle narrative has become problematic. Young traders are getting lured into low-conviction plays under the guise of "this is the plan." Sure, memes and speculation exist—that's part of the market. But there's a real difference between taking calculated risks and chasing hopium as if it's guaranteed returns. The constant hype cycle isn't educating newer participants; it's setting them up for losses. Memes can be legitimate trades, but when they're packaged as destiny or inevitability, that's where the damage starts. The market needs more honesty about probability and risk, less marketing disguised as prophecy.

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RunWithRugsvip
· 01-10 20:05
Basically, it's just a scam to fleece new investors under a different disguise. Newcomers hear about a "plan" and go all in, which is the most dangerous part.
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BoredWatchervip
· 01-10 20:04
That's right, but many newbies take "This is the plan" as a certainty, and as a result, get wrecked and cry for their moms.
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ser_ngmivip
· 01-10 19:53
Well said. These days, "big pancake" and "plan" have truly become the universal keys for cutting leeks... Do those newbies really believe it?
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CryptoComedianvip
· 01-10 19:51
Laughing and then crying, this wave of meme storytelling has turned many newcomers into leeks.
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