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Many memes these days don't even deserve to be called memes anymore.
Memes used to be genuinely catchy. First, there was something fun; people spontaneously created memes and derivative works, the community grew naturally, and the coin was merely a product of that culture. You might forget the price, but you won't forget the meme. Consensus could last for months or even a year because everyone was genuinely playing the same joke.
Now, many memes follow the same formula: a short sentence, find an angle, come up with a name, pump the price, wait for followers, then dump. From beginning to end, there's not a single funny moment. The price is pumped first, the community concocts a story, and it's gone before you can even remember the name.
The problem isn't that memes die quickly, but that they lack a meme. Without a meme, there's no repetition; without repetition, there's no community or consensus. What's left is just a game of "speed."
So it's not that the meme space is bad, it's that too many people mistake contrived narratives for culture. Memes without memorable elements are destined to be consumables.
This is why memes like ✨PUPPIES 🐶 are worth noting—they originate from familiar puppy emojis and internet slang, spreading based on humor and resonance, not market manipulation. Communities gather because they're "fun," and the culture continues through spontaneous fan creation. Only memes like this have a chance to be remembered and survive.
A true meme is something you'd stay in a group chat and use even without looking at stock charts; it's something you can still revisit and joke about months later. It's not just a transaction, but a lasting understanding.
#MEME




