Recently, I've noticed an interesting phenomenon—a certain exchange founder almost always tweets in English, which is making his IP increasingly international. There may be more to this than just language habits. Think about it: the power of discourse in the global crypto market is constantly shifting, and whoever can gain influence in the English-speaking world will have the upper hand. With this current trend, the leading position in the industry might actually be reshuffled. After all, in the Web3 space, international narratives and community consensus are often even more important than the product itself.
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GweiTooHigh
· 12-07 22:40
Damn, it's the same old rhetoric again, but it's true that power is valuable in the English-speaking community.
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consensus_whisperer
· 12-07 00:11
Bro, this observation is spot on. The English tweets are definitely part of a bigger game.
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FlashLoanLord
· 12-05 11:01
To put it bluntly, being able to tell a story is much more valuable than making a product. That’s the truth of the crypto world.
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MonkeySeeMonkeyDo
· 12-05 11:01
Simply put, it's a game of discourse power—whoever controls the English-speaking community wins half the battle.
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FlashLoanLarry
· 12-05 11:00
nah the real opportunity cost here is watching founders optimize for narrative instead of actual protocol efficiency... basis points of liquidity depth matter way more than twitter linguistics tbh
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CascadingDipBuyer
· 12-05 10:54
This is the game of soft power—whoever controls the narrative wins, and the product becomes secondary.
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TokenStorm
· 12-05 10:38
English Twitter is indeed providing international endorsement, but to be honest, on-chain data tells the real story—you have to look at their fund flows and wallet activity. Just talking doesn’t change the risk factor.
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DaoResearcher
· 12-05 10:36
From the perspective of governance discourse power, this is indeed a signal worth paying attention to. Control of the English narrative = competition for token holder consensus, which is a self-consistent logic.
Recently, I've noticed an interesting phenomenon—a certain exchange founder almost always tweets in English, which is making his IP increasingly international. There may be more to this than just language habits. Think about it: the power of discourse in the global crypto market is constantly shifting, and whoever can gain influence in the English-speaking world will have the upper hand. With this current trend, the leading position in the industry might actually be reshuffled. After all, in the Web3 space, international narratives and community consensus are often even more important than the product itself.