Long names for Meme coins can indeed make people suspicious. Just like back then when a well-known exchange launched a certain project, it was initially criticized as being—well, it sounded like a piece of crap. But you see, ultimately, it comes down to value recognition. Once the value is demonstrated, even the longest names can be accepted. The key is whether the project itself can impress people and truly offer some differentiation. By then, even the most bizarre names will be considered "classic."
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SerumDegen
· 11h ago
nah fr the naming copium is real but here's the thing—fundamentals always cascade eventually. seen too many "shitty names" moon when the on-chain signals start screaming. market psychology is 90% narratives anyway
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LootboxPhobia
· 20h ago
To be honest, I don't quite agree with this logic... A long name ≠ a great project, these two things aren't necessarily related, right?
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governance_lurker
· 20h ago
Well, that's also true... Whether the name is long or not isn't really the issue; the key is whether you can actually produce something.
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MonkeySeeMonkeyDo
· 20h ago
To be honest, whether the name is long or short is meaningless; the key is whether it can make money.
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NftDeepBreather
· 20h ago
Honestly, whether the name is long or not is irrelevant; the key is whether you can actually produce something.
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BlockchainFoodie
· 20h ago
ngl, long ticker names hit different once the tokenomics actually taste good... it's like aging a rare wine, you know? supply chain matters more than the label tbh
Long names for Meme coins can indeed make people suspicious. Just like back then when a well-known exchange launched a certain project, it was initially criticized as being—well, it sounded like a piece of crap. But you see, ultimately, it comes down to value recognition. Once the value is demonstrated, even the longest names can be accepted. The key is whether the project itself can impress people and truly offer some differentiation. By then, even the most bizarre names will be considered "classic."