Memecoin memes have indeed been played out. But have you noticed that these kinds of coins are really only active on mainstream exchanges? Just search for "memecoin" on a search engine, and you'll see actual projects that are listed on some compliant platforms.



To put it simply, the memecoin market has evolved into an interesting phenomenon — from initial community entertainment to now being a key asset class that exchanges focus on. Although there are endless ways to play, projects that can stand firm on mainstream exchanges still have some know-how. Not all memecoins can survive; those that do naturally follow certain logic.

This reflects a larger trend: the market's acceptance of high-risk, highly entertaining assets is increasing. Exchanges dare to list them because there is real trading demand and a user base behind it.
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NftMetaversePaintervip
· 2025-12-20 07:47
actually, what's fascinating here is the algorithmic selection mechanism at play—exchanges aren't just listing memecoins randomly, they're essentially running a computational filter on community engagement metrics. the ones that survive are optimizing for hash-based sentiment distribution, if you will. reminds me of my generative series on emergent market primitives
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TokenomicsDetectivevip
· 2025-12-18 08:53
It's true that mainstream exchanges dare to list it despite the issues, which shows there's something to it. Unlike those shady coins before, which couldn't last a week before pumping and running away.
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MindsetExpandervip
· 2025-12-18 08:51
The memes are indeed bad, but all the exchanges are listed, what does that mean? It just means someone is placing orders—that's the market. --- Instead of complaining about bad memes, it's better to see who is making money. The choice of exchanges itself is a signal. --- It sounds like rationalizing high-risk assets, but don't say survival has logic; sometimes it's just luck and consensus. --- It's quite interesting that compliant platforms dare to list memes, although I still think most of them are just air. --- From community entertainment to exchange asset categories, this transition is a bit fast—capital moves quickly. --- Not opposing, but I'm tired of hearing "survival makes sense." It's really just about hype and people chasing. --- Is the market acceptance increasing? Or are exchanges discovering that this is a good business for earning trading fees? --- Bad memes are bad, but looking at the trading volume of mainstream exchanges shows that the user base is indeed there. --- Real trading demand and user base might just be FOMO and gambling psychology. --- What's interesting is that memes have lasted until now, indicating retail investors are really playing this, and exchanges are just riding along.
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PumpDetectorvip
· 2025-12-18 08:47
yeah ngl the ones surviving on tier-1 exchanges aren't just meme anymore... that's institutional flow reading the room. smart money doesn't list dead weight.
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