Recently, a project called "Iron Lady" has been attracting attention in the crypto community. Observations show that several crypto heavyweights, including CZ, Xu Mingxing, and Justin Sun, have followed updates from the project's co-founder Pushpendra. This founder has given the project's spokesperson the nickname "Iron Lady," seemingly aiming to build a strong persona.
The project team revealed that someone started accumulating positions when the market cap was around 300,000. That said, meme coins are extremely risky—it's fine to watch from the sidelines, but think twice before investing real money. After all, attention from big names doesn't mean endorsement; we've seen these kinds of marketing tactics many times in the space.
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TheShibaWhisperer
· 13h ago
Same old trick again, do you really think the big shots just need to like it to hype it up? A $300,000 market cap for building a position? I'll just listen and move on, I don't believe this one will take off.
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Iron Lady? Sounds like a name designed to fleece retail investors. Meme coins are all about psychological games—wake up, everyone.
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CZ and the others can pay attention all they want, but can we get our money back? Chasing trends these days is more exhausting than chasing a girlfriend.
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Meme coins are always the same: hype the concept first, then dump on retail. The script is so overused.
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You dare talk about building a position with just $300,000? Let's wait and see. If there were really a good project, it would have already 10x’ed.
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Again? I can recite this kind of marketing pitch by heart now; the trick is always the same.
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Don’t ask me why I’m not playing. If you must know, it’s because I’ve been burned too many times. Now I just watch the show, not putting any money in.
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I really can’t trust the so-called endorsements from big shots anymore; the interests behind the scenes are just too complicated.
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MetaverseHermit
· 12-05 08:54
Big shots following = buy signal? Heh, I’ve seen this trick way too many times, and it always ends with retail investors left holding the bag.
Building a position with a 300,000 market cap? Feels like just another show to fleece newcomers.
Meme coins are just gambling, don’t be fooled by a name like “Iron Lady.”
CZ and the others just followed—what does that prove? It’s not like they’re going all in.
Trying to copy the last project’s playbook again, huh?
Looks lively, but if I’m really going in, I need to see if there’s anything substantial first.
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PseudoIntellectual
· 12-05 08:54
Does getting likes from big shots mean endorsement? Wake up, bro, I’ve seen this trick too many times.
Hyping up at just a $300,000 market cap? That’s a classic prelude to dumping on retail investors.
Meme coins are basically gambling. It’s fine to watch the hype, but I’d advise you not to throw real money in.
"Iron Lady" is a decent name, but what about the project itself? Feels like there’s nothing substantial there.
Following ≠ investing, don’t get the logic twisted, my friend.
Honestly, this kind of marketing tactic is everywhere in the space—nothing creative about it.
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GasWhisperer
· 12-05 08:51
ngl this "iron lady" thing reeks of classic meme coin theater... big names watching ≠ endorsement, we've seen this plot a thousand times before
Recently, a project called "Iron Lady" has been attracting attention in the crypto community. Observations show that several crypto heavyweights, including CZ, Xu Mingxing, and Justin Sun, have followed updates from the project's co-founder Pushpendra. This founder has given the project's spokesperson the nickname "Iron Lady," seemingly aiming to build a strong persona.
The project team revealed that someone started accumulating positions when the market cap was around 300,000. That said, meme coins are extremely risky—it's fine to watch from the sidelines, but think twice before investing real money. After all, attention from big names doesn't mean endorsement; we've seen these kinds of marketing tactics many times in the space.