So we convinced people that numbers on screens have value, and now we're gonna pitch physical cardboard to stock traders? This industry really knows how to flip the script. From digital assets to... trading cards? The irony is almost poetic.
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LadderToolGuy
· 8h ago
Haha, that's what I said, people in this circle really dare to sell anything. After digital brainwashing, now they’re switching to paper slips, and they actually think they're being innovative?
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CryptoPhoenix
· 8h ago
Oh wow, from digital numbers on the screen to physical cards—this move is really something... But think about it, isn't this just another form of value returning to its roots? The bottom range is nurturing new opportunities.
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SighingCashier
· 8h ago
Uh... so this is the endgame for Web3? From numbers on a screen to physical cards, it all comes full circle and still ends up fleecing the newbies.
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NullWhisperer
· 8h ago
nah tbh the "irony" angle misses the actual exploit vector here. physically-backed assets aren't inherently weaker than on-chain representations—technically speaking, it's just shifted the vulnerability surface. now you've got supply chain attacks, counterfeiting vectors, custodial risk... audit findings would probably flag this as "needs further review" lol
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CryptoMotivator
· 8h ago
Damn, this logic is insane. From virtual numbers to physical cards, it's a complete nesting doll scam.
So we convinced people that numbers on screens have value, and now we're gonna pitch physical cardboard to stock traders? This industry really knows how to flip the script. From digital assets to... trading cards? The irony is almost poetic.