The “crypto pullback” wave on April 1: Is it a joke or a warning sign from within the market?

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On April 1, at least five influential figures in the cryptocurrency space simultaneously posted farewell messages, declaring that they were leaving the industry permanently.

The posts quickly spread on X, sparking confusion among the community as they could not clearly tell which statements were serious and which were just a time-bound “prank.”

The exodus wave begins with the Solana ecosystem

Builder Codex—an experienced Solana developer—was the one who made the most detailed and attention-grabbing statement. He said he had built more than 50 products, including the Seedless Wallet, before concluding that this ecosystem “has collapsed and can’t be salvaged.”

Codex’s main target of criticism was pump.fun—a meme coin launchpad—where he claimed that 99.9% of the tokens launched ultimately lose value. According to him, most users don’t really care about the product; they’re just caught up in short-term speculative opportunities.

Codex shared that Seedless’s original goal was to make cryptocurrency more accessible in real life, but users ended up overlooking the product to chase after speculative tokens. He also announced that he would open-source all the projects he had built and completely leave this space.

A wave of emotional goodbyes

Not stopping with Codex, the wave of departures quickly spread to many other figures. Investor Evan Luthra posted a farewell message with an ambiguous tone but heavy emotion, hinting at personal losses he believes are irrecoverable.

Content creator Wise Advice also expressed a similar view, saying that Bitcoin has fallen sharply and the community has gradually gone quiet. Although he had previously weathered major shocks like Terra Luna’s collapse and FTX’s bankruptcy, he said he no longer has answers and doesn’t want to keep “pretending to understand the market.”

From another perspective, a builder nicknamed Potato agreed with Frank’s analysis related to the DeGods project. In his view, the meme coin market is facing a structural failure as the supply of new buyers gradually runs out.

This argument emphasizes that the bonding-curve mechanism has become too familiar, eliminating the incentive to buy at higher valuation levels. Potato then concluded succinctly: “the game is over.”

Meanwhile, analyst Rodrigo Moura revealed that he sold 145,000 Backpack tokens at a 50% loss, calling it his final statement regarding the project.

“April Fools” effect—and the real issues behind it

Having all the messages appear almost simultaneously on April 1 raised questions about their authenticity. None of the posts were removed or corrected immediately, leaving the community split between genuine concern and skepticism.

Even if the wave includes elements of satire or staging, it still reflects long-standing problems in the market: the dominance of meme-coin speculation over the value of real products, weakened user retention across ecosystems, and the depletion of fresh capital inflows.

After all, the “goodbyes” on 4/1 may just be a symbolic performance, but they clearly expose the pressures and dissatisfaction that have been building up within the cryptocurrency builder community.

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