Some folks really missed the ZAMA train earlier this year, and now they're throwing shade at the token instead of owning it. The irony? These same people dropped serious money buying MONAD when it was valued at $2B—clearly betting on hype-driven opportunities. The gap between their ZAMA skepticism and MONAD enthusiasm tells you everything about retail investor sentiment: they'd rather chase the new narrative than admit they were late to the party. Classic move when positions don't go as planned.
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BearMarketBard
· 12h ago
ngl this is a typical retail investor mentality—missed out, blame others, and turn around to chase the new hot trend...
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GovernancePretender
· 01-11 23:10
Ha, this is the gambler's self-deception... Missing out on ZAMA and blaming others, then turning around and going All in on MONAD, truly impressive.
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AirdropHunterXM
· 01-11 23:05
People who missed Zama now criticize it, then turn around and chase after Monad. That's really funny.
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gas_fee_therapist
· 01-11 23:02
Ha, you're so right. These people are the typical regretters turning into trolls.
ngl When buying MONAD, each one was more aggressive than the last. Now that ZAMA has risen, they're starting to find fault again. Truly remarkable.
Chasing new narratives is more comfortable than admitting you've missed out.
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ShamedApeSeller
· 01-11 22:57
NGL, this is a common problem among retail investors. When ZAMA misses out, they start blaming others, then turn around and rush towards MONAD. Truly.
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CoffeeNFTrader
· 01-11 22:55
Haha, this is the true portrayal of retail investors. Missed ZAMA and criticize the project, then rush into MONAD, a typical chasing gains and selling at a loss mentality.
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FlashLoanKing
· 01-11 22:53
Haha, that really hits home. The bandwagon phenomenon is truly outrageous.
Some folks really missed the ZAMA train earlier this year, and now they're throwing shade at the token instead of owning it. The irony? These same people dropped serious money buying MONAD when it was valued at $2B—clearly betting on hype-driven opportunities. The gap between their ZAMA skepticism and MONAD enthusiasm tells you everything about retail investor sentiment: they'd rather chase the new narrative than admit they were late to the party. Classic move when positions don't go as planned.