
Dogecoin, Shiba Inu, PEPE — pick your flavor. They dominate social media, siphon billions of dollars, and make crypto look like a massive joke to outsiders.
And you know what?
That might just be what the crypto industry needs to wake up.
Memecoins represent everything wrong with today’s crypto landscape. They’re the epitome of speculation over substance. No real use case. No groundbreaking technology. Just memes, hype, and a lottery ticket mentality.
Their rise is a symptom of a bigger issue:
The value system in crypto is broken.
Here’s how:
Most people don’t buy memecoins because they believe in the project. They buy because they think the price will go up — and fast. This creates a cycle of hype, pumps, and inevitable crashes that leave newcomers burned and skeptical of all crypto.
Valuable projects — ones that solve real problems — are buried under the noise. Why spend time understanding decentralized finance (DeFi) or privacy coins when memecoins promise quick riches with none of the homework?
Memecoins make crypto look like a clown show. Regulators and skeptics see tokens like Dogecoin and think the whole industry is unserious. That slows adoption and invites harsher crackdowns.
Yes, they’re chaotic.
Yes, they attract grifters.
But memecoins might force crypto to address its deeper problems — and that’s not a bad thing.
Here’s why:
Memecoins shine a harsh light on crypto’s priorities. They reveal how disconnected the space has become from its roots. It’s not about building better systems anymore — it’s about making money as fast as possible.
This harsh reality is a wake-up call for serious builders and investors. If crypto doesn’t shift back to its core mission of decentralization, privacy, and financial empowerment, it risks losing credibility altogether.
Love them or hate them, memecoins bring people into the ecosystem. Most of these newcomers don’t stay for the memes — they stay because they discover something deeper.
Think about the early Dogecoin community. It started as a joke but eventually introduced millions of people to Bitcoin, Ethereum, and the broader crypto world. For some, memecoins are the gateway drug to real innovation.
When memecoins dominate, serious projects have no choice but to stand out. It’s no longer enough to launch a token with a fancy whitepaper and some buzzwords. Builders need to deliver real utility — or risk being overshadowed by memes.
Competition breeds innovation. If memecoins set the bar this low, it’s an opportunity for meaningful projects to raise it.
The memecoin bubble will burst — it always does. But what happens afterward will define the future of crypto.
Here’s the path forward:
Instead of shaming people for buying memecoins, educate them about crypto’s real value. Show how DeFi eliminates banks’ inefficiencies, how Bitcoin protects against inflation, or how decentralized identity tools safeguard privacy.
Builders need to prioritize usability and scalability. The next wave of crypto users won’t care about technology — they’ll care about how it solves their problems. Whether it’s faster payments, cheaper remittances, or censorship-resistant platforms, the focus should be on value creation.
Let’s stop glorifying 100x meme pumps. Instead, amplify the success stories of projects that make a difference. Highlight apps that reduce transaction fees, platforms that give artists ownership of their work, or tools that protect free speech.
The rise of memecoins isn’t the problem — it’s a reflection of the crypto community’s priorities.
And while it’s tempting to dismiss them as a distraction, they’re really a reminder of what’s at stake.
Crypto wasn’t created to be a casino.
It was created to empower people, challenge broken systems, and unlock possibilities we’ve never seen before.
The question is: Can we look beyond the memes and rediscover the mission?
Because if we can, memecoins might just be the jolt of self-awareness the industry desperately needs.
And if we can’t?
Well, we’ll be left holding bags of worthless tokens, wondering where it all went wrong
<100 subscribers

Dogecoin, Shiba Inu, PEPE — pick your flavor. They dominate social media, siphon billions of dollars, and make crypto look like a massive joke to outsiders.
And you know what?
That might just be what the crypto industry needs to wake up.
Memecoins represent everything wrong with today’s crypto landscape. They’re the epitome of speculation over substance. No real use case. No groundbreaking technology. Just memes, hype, and a lottery ticket mentality.
Their rise is a symptom of a bigger issue:
The value system in crypto is broken.
Here’s how:
Most people don’t buy memecoins because they believe in the project. They buy because they think the price will go up — and fast. This creates a cycle of hype, pumps, and inevitable crashes that leave newcomers burned and skeptical of all crypto.
Valuable projects — ones that solve real problems — are buried under the noise. Why spend time understanding decentralized finance (DeFi) or privacy coins when memecoins promise quick riches with none of the homework?
Memecoins make crypto look like a clown show. Regulators and skeptics see tokens like Dogecoin and think the whole industry is unserious. That slows adoption and invites harsher crackdowns.
Yes, they’re chaotic.
Yes, they attract grifters.
But memecoins might force crypto to address its deeper problems — and that’s not a bad thing.
Here’s why:
Memecoins shine a harsh light on crypto’s priorities. They reveal how disconnected the space has become from its roots. It’s not about building better systems anymore — it’s about making money as fast as possible.
This harsh reality is a wake-up call for serious builders and investors. If crypto doesn’t shift back to its core mission of decentralization, privacy, and financial empowerment, it risks losing credibility altogether.
Love them or hate them, memecoins bring people into the ecosystem. Most of these newcomers don’t stay for the memes — they stay because they discover something deeper.
Think about the early Dogecoin community. It started as a joke but eventually introduced millions of people to Bitcoin, Ethereum, and the broader crypto world. For some, memecoins are the gateway drug to real innovation.
When memecoins dominate, serious projects have no choice but to stand out. It’s no longer enough to launch a token with a fancy whitepaper and some buzzwords. Builders need to deliver real utility — or risk being overshadowed by memes.
Competition breeds innovation. If memecoins set the bar this low, it’s an opportunity for meaningful projects to raise it.
The memecoin bubble will burst — it always does. But what happens afterward will define the future of crypto.
Here’s the path forward:
Instead of shaming people for buying memecoins, educate them about crypto’s real value. Show how DeFi eliminates banks’ inefficiencies, how Bitcoin protects against inflation, or how decentralized identity tools safeguard privacy.
Builders need to prioritize usability and scalability. The next wave of crypto users won’t care about technology — they’ll care about how it solves their problems. Whether it’s faster payments, cheaper remittances, or censorship-resistant platforms, the focus should be on value creation.
Let’s stop glorifying 100x meme pumps. Instead, amplify the success stories of projects that make a difference. Highlight apps that reduce transaction fees, platforms that give artists ownership of their work, or tools that protect free speech.
The rise of memecoins isn’t the problem — it’s a reflection of the crypto community’s priorities.
And while it’s tempting to dismiss them as a distraction, they’re really a reminder of what’s at stake.
Crypto wasn’t created to be a casino.
It was created to empower people, challenge broken systems, and unlock possibilities we’ve never seen before.
The question is: Can we look beyond the memes and rediscover the mission?
Because if we can, memecoins might just be the jolt of self-awareness the industry desperately needs.
And if we can’t?
Well, we’ll be left holding bags of worthless tokens, wondering where it all went wrong
Share Dialog
Share Dialog
Richard.M.Lu
Richard.M.Lu
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