Nick T
@nt
hot take, maybe should have anonposted.. but: seems that a lot of normie "dyor" boils down to: - reading a complicated whitepaper/roadmap - seeing that it's conceptually complex, failing to understand it fully - using that as signal to invest: "sounds impressive, must ape" projects are hacking this signal by: - creating more conceptually complex whitepapers - comically detailed/rigid roadmaps - coining heavy terminology to mean ultimately simple things - shallow integrations with buzzword tech - e.g. "AI agent" it's ironic because the engineered complexity kills any chance for that "utility" to be adopted or actually used. and yet it's "bullish"
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D-wayñe 🎩🕴
@drrrner
How does the average normie win if they’re always exploited even while coming in at a disadvantage
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Nick T
@nt
do deeper research. or simply invest in things they actually find themselves using. avoid investing in anything you don't fully understand
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kripcat.eth 🎩
@kripcat.eth
This advice is pretty difficult to follow in crypto. Not because projects are too difficult to understand, but because there is a culture of "vague posting" (Perhaps a legacy of the SEC securitizing any project with explicit purpose). Many projects moon on the whiff of the right meta, even if no details on tokenomics have been laid out. If you wait till the details of a project have been clearly laid out, and you're comfortable with your understanding of it; you're often the exit liquidity for someone who didn't.
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Locked In (On Fire)
@warezow.eth
Ask ChatGPT
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