During the National Day holiday, while the A-shares market was closed and stock traders were crowding tourist attractions, a wilder game was unfolding in the crypto world.
Within the ecosystem of a leading exchange, several tokens that seemed like jokes—Meme4, PALU, and something called “Exchange Life”—saw their market caps multiply dozens of times within days. Early entrants saw their account balances easily surpass a million dollars. The Chinese-speaking community exploded with excitement, and Twitter was flooded with cheers for the “wealth code.”
Then on October 9, everything changed.
The free fall began. Some coins evaporated 95% in a single day, over 100,000 people were liquidated, with a total amount of $621 million. The legend of overnight riches instantly turned into a live broadcast of bitter losses for retail investors.
I know this script too well. I’ve seen it on Wall Street, and in Lujiazui.
Remember the GameStop saga?
In 2021, Reddit retail investors banded together to squeeze Wall Street shorts, sending the stock price of a nearly bankrupt game retailer soaring. Short sellers lost so much they questioned reality. The US SEC chairman called it a “milestone in behavioral finance”—no matter how ridiculous the price, as long as the trading is real and the information is transparent, it’s “just part of the market.”
Americans are straightforward: Let bubbles happen, because bubbles themselves are catalysts for market evolution.
If this Meme coin frenzy happened on Nasdaq? Wall Street would launch a “Meme Stock ETF,” packaging social media hype as investment factors to sell to you; The Wall Street Journal would write lengthy articles praising the “victory of retail capitalism”; The SEC would investigate “social media market manipulation” and ultimately conclude: This isn’t fraud, it’s a collective financial reaction driven by group sentiment via algorithms and social sharing.
In China? The script is totally different.
If “Exchange Life” appeared on the Shanghai Stock Exchange, regulators would immediately issue risk warnings, media would call for rational investing, and the whole thing would be defined as a “speculative market anomaly” and used as an investor education case study. Stability comes first; excitement is allowed, but must be orderly. Innovation is welcome, but you must bear the risks yourself.
But Meme coins live in a third universe
The magic of the crypto market is—it’s not regulated by the SEC, nor by the CSRC. This is a no man’s land: a gray financial experiment zone self-organized by code, liquidity, and narrative.
Here, the American style of social speculation mechanism (viral information diffusion + collective momentum) and the Chinese grassroots wealth mentality (resonance + sense of community participation) are strangely mixed together.
Exchanges are no longer neutral platforms, but “narrative machines”; KOLs are no longer bystanders, but price amplifiers; retail investors get hyped up in cycles of algorithm and consensus, then burn themselves out.
The most fundamental change is: price is no longer determined by cash flow, but by the speed of narrative and the density of consensus.
We’re witnessing the birth of “emotional capital”—a form of capital with no financial statements, just cultural symbols; no fundamentals, just consensus curves; not seeking rational returns, only emotional explosions.
When algorithms fail, emotion is currency
The data is brutal: in the first nine months of 2025, 90% of top Meme coins crashed in market cap; in the second quarter, 65% of new tokens lost over 90% of their value within six months.
It’s like a digital gold rush—most gold diggers lose everything, only the shovel sellers always win.
But the core problem is: when money starts telling stories, the underlying logic of global finance is being completely rewritten.
In traditional markets, price reflects value;
In crypto markets, price creates value.
This is the ultimate expression of decentralization—and perhaps the ultimate form of de-responsibilization. When narrative replaces cash flow, and emotion becomes the asset pricing standard, each of us becomes a lab rat in this experiment.
Where’s the way out?
The Web3 industry stands at a crossroads. Should it continue indulging in the short-term frenzy of “emotional capitalism,” or shift towards the long-term construction of a “value-driven ecosystem”?
The real solution requires:
Strengthening community governance mechanisms
Introducing more transparent regulatory frameworks
Establishing systematic investor education
Only this way can decentralized technology truly empower global financial fairness, rather than become a tool for a few to exploit the many.
Next time you see a KOL hyping a “100x coin,” ask yourself:
Am I participating in financial innovation, or just paying for someone else’s financial freedom?
When money starts telling stories, what you need most isn’t FOMO—it’s the ability to think rationally.
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GateUser-26d7f434
· 12-08 23:41
I think this is just a game of musical chairs, and every time someone fails to catch it.
View OriginalReply0
digital_archaeologist
· 12-08 08:26
Here we go again, a hundredfold coin goes to zero within ten minutes—truly classic.
View OriginalReply0
ZkSnarker
· 12-06 10:28
okay but like... did we actually think this time would be different lol
Reply0
DustCollector
· 12-06 02:51
Here we go again, it's always the same trick. I should have seen through their game long ago.
View OriginalReply0
RugDocScientist
· 12-06 02:49
Good grief, it's the same trick again... But this time the scale is truly outrageous, $621 million just gone like that.
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It's always the same script, just change the token name and copy-paste, I’m really speechless.
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A 95% drop? What a joke, this is the true face of meme coins, everyone.
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To put it bluntly, the whales are dumping, and retail investors are playing along—so pathetic.
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Wait, this is nothing like GameStop, don’t compare them randomly.
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A hundred thousand people got liquidated... Just thinking about it hurts. Whose pocket did all that money go into?
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Wake up, everyone. There's no free lunch, only traps falling from the sky.
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My friend got in and is still fooling himself that it will rebound, sigh...
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So are there still people daring to FOMO into meme coins now? Truly brave.
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This kind of thing should all be banned, it's pure robbery.
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A token that looks like a joke but cut down the most naive retail investors—ironic.
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The Chinese-speaking community took a hit this time, but next time they still won’t change this bad habit.
View OriginalReply0
ShitcoinArbitrageur
· 12-06 02:49
Same old trick, some people get rich while others go bankrupt. It's so damn boring.
View OriginalReply0
ShamedApeSeller
· 12-06 02:49
This is truly witnessing history—the era of retail investors collectively writing the script has arrived.
100,000 people liquidated? Just listen to that number, it’s exhilarating!
Wealth password? More like wealth “honey” code—so sweet it’s bitter.
Meme coins evaporating by 95% overnight, now that’s a real art form.
Wall Street played these tricks for a hundred years; we learned them in two weeks. Incredible.
Those Reddit folks have been stirring things up in the name of retail investors for a while—now it’s our turn to give it a try.
Overnight riches turning into overnight bankruptcy—this move, I’m seriously stunned.
You’re still taking photos of crowds at tourist spots? I’m here watching small-town youths get rekt.
$621 million—one word: spectacular.
At the moment the market flipped, some people cried, right? I just laughed.
View OriginalReply0
SmartMoneyWallet
· 12-06 02:47
$621 million evaporated overnight. Behind these numbers, there must be major players reversing the market after buying the dip—the chip distribution had already given it away.
View OriginalReply0
RektButSmiling
· 12-06 02:45
This is the crypto world—each move is more ruthless than the last. Just a couple of days ago, everyone was hyping Meme coins flipping dozens of times, and in a blink, it’s a slaughterhouse for retail investors.
It’s the same old routine: people hear about someone getting rich overnight and rush in, only to get liquidated for 621 million. That’s playing big.
In the end, it’s just a game of musical chairs to see who’s left holding the hot potato. Those who got in early made a killing, while those who came later got wrecked.
Why are so many people still rushing in? Honestly, it’s just gambling for a shot at turning things around.
That’s the end of this story, but next month there’ll be a new coin, and the cycle repeats...
Say no more—just thinking about the money I lost before makes me miserable.
View OriginalReply0
OnChainDetective
· 12-06 02:21
ran the numbers on those wallet clusters... classic pump pattern, literally textbook. 95% single day wipeout screams coordinated liquidation cascade, not organic selling pressure. traced the transaction hops and yeah, suspicious activity detected all the way through.
When Retail Investors Start Writing the Script: Behind the Meme Coin Roller Coaster, Global Financial Logic Is Being Rewritten
During the National Day holiday, while the A-shares market was closed and stock traders were crowding tourist attractions, a wilder game was unfolding in the crypto world.
Within the ecosystem of a leading exchange, several tokens that seemed like jokes—Meme4, PALU, and something called “Exchange Life”—saw their market caps multiply dozens of times within days. Early entrants saw their account balances easily surpass a million dollars. The Chinese-speaking community exploded with excitement, and Twitter was flooded with cheers for the “wealth code.”
Then on October 9, everything changed.
The free fall began. Some coins evaporated 95% in a single day, over 100,000 people were liquidated, with a total amount of $621 million. The legend of overnight riches instantly turned into a live broadcast of bitter losses for retail investors.
I know this script too well. I’ve seen it on Wall Street, and in Lujiazui.
Remember the GameStop saga?
In 2021, Reddit retail investors banded together to squeeze Wall Street shorts, sending the stock price of a nearly bankrupt game retailer soaring. Short sellers lost so much they questioned reality. The US SEC chairman called it a “milestone in behavioral finance”—no matter how ridiculous the price, as long as the trading is real and the information is transparent, it’s “just part of the market.”
Americans are straightforward: Let bubbles happen, because bubbles themselves are catalysts for market evolution.
If this Meme coin frenzy happened on Nasdaq? Wall Street would launch a “Meme Stock ETF,” packaging social media hype as investment factors to sell to you; The Wall Street Journal would write lengthy articles praising the “victory of retail capitalism”; The SEC would investigate “social media market manipulation” and ultimately conclude: This isn’t fraud, it’s a collective financial reaction driven by group sentiment via algorithms and social sharing.
In China? The script is totally different.
If “Exchange Life” appeared on the Shanghai Stock Exchange, regulators would immediately issue risk warnings, media would call for rational investing, and the whole thing would be defined as a “speculative market anomaly” and used as an investor education case study. Stability comes first; excitement is allowed, but must be orderly. Innovation is welcome, but you must bear the risks yourself.
But Meme coins live in a third universe
The magic of the crypto market is—it’s not regulated by the SEC, nor by the CSRC. This is a no man’s land: a gray financial experiment zone self-organized by code, liquidity, and narrative.
Here, the American style of social speculation mechanism (viral information diffusion + collective momentum) and the Chinese grassroots wealth mentality (resonance + sense of community participation) are strangely mixed together.
Exchanges are no longer neutral platforms, but “narrative machines”; KOLs are no longer bystanders, but price amplifiers; retail investors get hyped up in cycles of algorithm and consensus, then burn themselves out.
The most fundamental change is: price is no longer determined by cash flow, but by the speed of narrative and the density of consensus.
We’re witnessing the birth of “emotional capital”—a form of capital with no financial statements, just cultural symbols; no fundamentals, just consensus curves; not seeking rational returns, only emotional explosions.
When algorithms fail, emotion is currency
The data is brutal: in the first nine months of 2025, 90% of top Meme coins crashed in market cap; in the second quarter, 65% of new tokens lost over 90% of their value within six months.
It’s like a digital gold rush—most gold diggers lose everything, only the shovel sellers always win.
But the core problem is: when money starts telling stories, the underlying logic of global finance is being completely rewritten.
In traditional markets, price reflects value;
In crypto markets, price creates value.
This is the ultimate expression of decentralization—and perhaps the ultimate form of de-responsibilization. When narrative replaces cash flow, and emotion becomes the asset pricing standard, each of us becomes a lab rat in this experiment.
Where’s the way out?
The Web3 industry stands at a crossroads. Should it continue indulging in the short-term frenzy of “emotional capitalism,” or shift towards the long-term construction of a “value-driven ecosystem”?
The real solution requires:
Only this way can decentralized technology truly empower global financial fairness, rather than become a tool for a few to exploit the many.
Next time you see a KOL hyping a “100x coin,” ask yourself:
Am I participating in financial innovation, or just paying for someone else’s financial freedom?
When money starts telling stories, what you need most isn’t FOMO—it’s the ability to think rationally.