In the ups and downs of the crypto market, I have witnessed an interesting phenomenon—those once popular Meme coins, after multiple rounds of dumping, are finally pulled back. What this reflects is not some mysterious force, but the genuine conviction of a large number of holders supporting it. They are not the type to be scared off by a little profit or loss; instead, they choose to hold tightly at critical moments. How rare is this consensus? It is enough to make a coin's story very interesting. From a market perspective, this resilience itself tells a story—something that can withstand dumps and still turn around, isn't it worth paying serious attention to?
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NeonCollector
· 10h ago
Basically, it's a faith-based coin; those who survive are true believers supporting it.
I've seen Meme coins come back to life many times, but this time it seems a bit different.
Can it rebound after a dump? Then someone must really be buying the dip. Don't just tell stories.
This kind of resilience... sounds a bit romantic, but the risks are real too.
Whether consensus is scarce or not, I don't know; anyway, those who cut losses are always more.
Don't be brainwashed by the phrase "take it seriously," Meme coins are just Meme coins.
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TokenomicsTinfoilHat
· 15h ago
Haha, come on, it really is a faith coin. Holding on tightly, how many years can this play last?
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Crash the price back? It looks more like a rotation of the market maker, a story of retail investors taking over.
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Reasonable, I just like to watch this kind of community strength forcibly lift the coin.
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The scarcity of consensus is a bunch of nonsense. It’s just that everyone has lost almost everything, so they might as well lie flat and wait for a rebound.
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Enough, stop romanticizing it. This is the fate of gamblers.
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It's a bit interesting, definitely much better than some brainless airdrop coins.
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Wait, are you talking about resilience or the relay baton being passed well? I’m a bit confused.
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This round of operation is indeed impressive. Not many coins are as stubbornly defended by the community.
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DaoTherapy
· 15h ago
Honestly, this is the power of faith. Those true hodlers don't care about short-term fluctuations.
The fact that they can pull back from a dump really has a story behind it.
Surviving a dump is definitely worth watching.
Meme coins are essentially a faith game; if you can endure, you win.
Consensus is something very scarce. Those who can accumulate it are true believers.
Come to think of it, as always—only by going through hell can you see through people's hearts.
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CascadingDipBuyer
· 15h ago
Laughing to death, it's just a bunch of people pulling together and stubbornly holding on.
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No matter how hard the dump, it can't shake the faith—that's the core of meme coins.
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Surviving hell and still bouncing around, it really has some substance.
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Rather than resilience, it's more like a gambler's obsession haha.
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To put it simply, consensus is valuable, and retail investors are encouraging each other.
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True holders have long seen through it; short-term fluctuations are no big deal.
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Coins that can turn around... listen to the stories, enjoy the gossip, not a bad deal.
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This argument sounds reasonable, but in the end, it still depends on whether the consensus can be maintained sustainably.
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Everyone who holds it has made a fortune, and those who sold in a panic probably regret it now.
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What a scarcity of consensus—it's just good luck to bump into a group of die-hard fans.
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SneakyFlashloan
· 15h ago
Coins that can be revived after a crash, in other words, are supported by true believers holding the bottom line.
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LiquidityWizard
· 15h ago
nah actually the "belief" narrative is just survivorship bias wrapped in hopium. statistically speaking, for every meme coin that bounces back there's like... what, 500 that just flatline into oblivion? the risk-adjusted returns don't check out when you factor in opportunity cost. theoretically speaking, those holders might just be averaging down on a losing position and calling it conviction lol
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DegenWhisperer
· 15h ago
Honestly, this is the power of faith—the result of retail investors stubbornly holding the line.
No matter how hard the sell-offs, they can't turn the situation around unless someone truly holds their position.
Playing Meme coins is all about consensus; once the consensus breaks, it's basically gg.
But on the other hand, coins that can withstand several rounds of sell-offs do have something special.
I still believe in those big investors who hold stubbornly—they are the key.
It's called faith in a nice way; in a harsh way, it's just being trapped and immobile, haha.
I agree with this view; resilience itself indicates the strength of the support behind it.
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rugpull_ptsd
· 15h ago
Honestly, faith is a scarce commodity in the crypto world. Most people only "hold on" after being trapped.
The fact that Meme coins have come back alive truly shows there's something worth watching.
That's why I'm still here, even though my heart is filled with wounds.
Those who crawl out of a dump are often more stories than those who only go up and never down.
If I hadn't held on tightly, I wouldn't have the current jokes.
In the ups and downs of the crypto market, I have witnessed an interesting phenomenon—those once popular Meme coins, after multiple rounds of dumping, are finally pulled back. What this reflects is not some mysterious force, but the genuine conviction of a large number of holders supporting it. They are not the type to be scared off by a little profit or loss; instead, they choose to hold tightly at critical moments. How rare is this consensus? It is enough to make a coin's story very interesting. From a market perspective, this resilience itself tells a story—something that can withstand dumps and still turn around, isn't it worth paying serious attention to?