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Elon Musk says "The time has come": Is Dogecoin really going to the moon?
Elon Musk is at it again.
On November 4th, this “Dogecoin godfather” reposted an old tweet from April 2021—“SpaceX will send a real Dogecoin to the real Moon,” accompanied by three words: The time has come.
Once the news broke, the community exploded. DOGE briefly surged from $0.172 to $0.178 but was soon pushed back down by market selling pressure. Compared to the crazy rally in 2021 when “a single tweet caused a 30% surge,” this reaction was much more subdued.
What does this indicate? The market is getting smarter. Current investors are no longer falling for hype; they want real substance.
This Time, No Bluffing
Back in 2021, a few weeks after Musk’s tweet, he officially announced: SpaceX would undertake the DOGE-1 Moon Mission, and payment would be exclusively in Dogecoin.
The project was managed by Canadian company Geometric Energy Corporation, centered around a CubeSat micro-satellite. The entire mission’s cost? Paid entirely in DOGE. The satellite would be launched aboard a Falcon 9 rocket, used for Earth observation and IoT data transmission.
Sounds sci-fi, but the U.S. Federal Communications Commission had already issued a license. The document states that this authorization “will expire two years after the mission launch or on October 30, 2025”—in other words, the window opens this December.
If the launch is successful, it will be the first space mission in history paid entirely with cryptocurrency. Not just hype, but real commercial application with hard cash.
Meme Coins “Going Legit”?
SpaceX Vice President of Commercial Sales Tom Ochinero said at the time: “DOGE-1 will demonstrate the application of cryptocurrencies beyond Earth’s orbit and lay the groundwork for interstellar trade.”
Interstellar trade sounds lofty, but the core logic is clear—Dogecoin is moving from a meme symbol to a real business tool.
This satellite is not just a display; it will participate in actual data transmission, meaning DOGE can truly integrate into a value loop. No longer maintained solely by community sentiment and Musk’s tweets, but supported by tangible applications.
Of course, all of this hinges on one condition: the success of the mission.
What Is the Market Watching?
Currently, the entire crypto market isn’t doing well. BTC has fallen below $106,000, ETH can’t hold $3,600, and DOGE naturally can’t withstand the pressure either.
But the launch plan in December is still there. This isn’t the kind of “hype promises” from four years ago; the technical review is complete, the process is clear, and the launch window is set.
If SpaceX really sends Dogecoin to the Moon, it will be a landmark event in crypto history—not a price frenzy, but a breakthrough on the application layer.
How will the market react then? No one can say for sure. But at least now, everyone is watching that launch date.