Can you believe it? The most absurd script for financial freedom in the world is actually hidden in a joke - the story of DOGE is simply the "absurd comedy template" of the encryption circle.
In 2013, two programmers looked at Bitcoin's "serious face" and found it amusing, so they casually took a Shiba Inu meme as a logo and created a "joke coin." Nobody took it seriously: it was used for tipping in forums, where you could send thousands for just a few cents; it was also used for charity, even crowdfunding to send the Jamaican bobsled team to the Winter Olympics, treating the whole thing like a game.
In the first few years, this coin wasn't worth anything at all. You could easily mine several thousand to tens of thousands of coins in one night with an old computer. Back then, if you lost a wallet with stored coins, no one would care—after all, the "assets" inside might not even be worth as much as a one-yuan coin picked up off the street.
The twist came more suddenly than the script: in 2020, Musk entered the scene with the title of "Dogecoin Godfather," laughing on television and calling it "the people's cryptocurrency." This was great, as the price skyrocketed from $0.001 to $0.7. Those who casually mined and tossed aside their coins suddenly found a "cash machine" hidden deep within their hard drives: some traded for luxury cars and villas, while others quit their jobs outright — what was originally just a playful joke turned into a life-changing comeback.
Looking back now, the most unserious "joke coin" once ranked among the top ten in global market capitalization, leaving a bunch of "serious projects" behind. This is probably the most magical aspect of the encryption world: the more you don't take something seriously, the more likely it is that one day it will hand you a ticket to financial freedom, printed with Shiba Inu memes.
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Can you believe it? The most absurd script for financial freedom in the world is actually hidden in a joke - the story of DOGE is simply the "absurd comedy template" of the encryption circle.
In 2013, two programmers looked at Bitcoin's "serious face" and found it amusing, so they casually took a Shiba Inu meme as a logo and created a "joke coin." Nobody took it seriously: it was used for tipping in forums, where you could send thousands for just a few cents; it was also used for charity, even crowdfunding to send the Jamaican bobsled team to the Winter Olympics, treating the whole thing like a game.
In the first few years, this coin wasn't worth anything at all. You could easily mine several thousand to tens of thousands of coins in one night with an old computer. Back then, if you lost a wallet with stored coins, no one would care—after all, the "assets" inside might not even be worth as much as a one-yuan coin picked up off the street.
The twist came more suddenly than the script: in 2020, Musk entered the scene with the title of "Dogecoin Godfather," laughing on television and calling it "the people's cryptocurrency." This was great, as the price skyrocketed from $0.001 to $0.7. Those who casually mined and tossed aside their coins suddenly found a "cash machine" hidden deep within their hard drives: some traded for luxury cars and villas, while others quit their jobs outright — what was originally just a playful joke turned into a life-changing comeback.
Looking back now, the most unserious "joke coin" once ranked among the top ten in global market capitalization, leaving a bunch of "serious projects" behind. This is probably the most magical aspect of the encryption world: the more you don't take something seriously, the more likely it is that one day it will hand you a ticket to financial freedom, printed with Shiba Inu memes.
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