A certain big shot lost his cool on social media again.
The reason is simple—he casually said "DOYR," and instantly a bunch of copycat tokens with the same name appeared on-chain. This time he couldn't help but jump out and clarify: "I’m just chatting when I post, not writing a project whitepaper for you."
To put it bluntly: Just because I mention DOYR doesn’t mean you can launch $DOYR to fleece retail investors. If things go south, don’t pin it on me.
This isn’t the first time something like this has happened.
Earlier, he showed off his pet dog, named "XILANHUA" (broccoli). What happened? Overnight, more than a dozen $XILANHUA tokens popped up, and a certain public chain was nearly paralyzed by spam contracts.
Later, he brought up a charity project called Giggle Academy, aiming to do education. The community instantly got the idea—launched $GIGGLE, pumped it at open, then dumped it back to the floor price. He had to issue a statement overnight to distance himself.
Now, this guy might as well carve a disclaimer into his DNA: "Even if you turn my catchphrases into meme coins, I’ll keep posting as usual. But the token’s price movement has nothing to do with me."
Bottom line, he knows exactly what's going on: Retail traders stalk his activity to snipe launches, Early players cash in on the hype, Then when it crashes, they come back and blame him for “leading the rug pull.”
Of course, the community isn’t buying it: “So you rake in the engagement, and we hold the bags?” “Next time you say ‘drink water,’ is someone going to launch $HESHUI right away?”
The most ironic part—the more he distances himself, the more hyped the market gets. Now "KOL catchphrases = meme coin material" has basically become an industry consensus.
If you ask me, here’s the most likely list of new coins coming up: $DOYR $JUSTSAID $NOTME
As for whether someone will actually launch another $DOYR and run the same play? Simple. If he mentions “DOYR” again, you’ll see a string of contract addresses in the comments before you know it.
Crypto never lacks geniuses. What’s always missing is the last person left holding the bag—you.
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RiddleMaster
· 5h ago
Ha, here we go again. Every time he opens his mouth, the entire crypto circle bets on his fortune.
Absolutely incredible. Just mentioning a word can lead to coin creation. Next time he yawns, does $HACHUAN also need to go live?
Isn't this the highest form of traffic monetization? People are getting desperate and rushing in.
He says he's cutting ties, but retail investors hear it as a launch signal—a typical crypto circle farce.
Wait, can $DOYR really rise? Or should I try to bottom fish with $NOTME and test my luck?
It sounds ridiculous, but this is crypto—an insane place.
The contract address is already queued up, just waiting for him to say $DOYR again.
This guy is also quite helpless. No matter how much he clarifies, it’s useless; instead, he gets more popular.
The bagholder is always the last one to exit, with no exceptions.
View OriginalReply0
HashBrownies
· 11h ago
Haha, laughing to death, as if I didn't make any traffic, then turn around and start tweeting again.
View OriginalReply0
WalletAnxietyPatient
· 18h ago
Haha, this is the crypto world. No matter what is said, people keep jumping in.
The bagholders are really something else. The more they clarify, the more they end up buying in.
Next time he says the food is delicious, maybe $HAOCHIYAO will be launched.
View OriginalReply0
GateUser-00be86fc
· 12-10 10:13
Haha, here we go again. This guy really lives up to that saying—someone always steps up in the crypto world.
Next, there will definitely be someone to do something with $NOTME. I bet five dollars.
Retail investors' fate is like this: watching others tweet and wanting to be the first to post, but in the end, always the last to act.
View OriginalReply0
NonFungibleDegen
· 12-09 18:15
bro this is exactly why i stopped reading kol tweets lol... just aping in blind at this point, probably nothing right? ser we're all just one meme away from getting rugged again ngl
Reply0
AirdropFreedom
· 12-09 18:05
Ha, I'm familiar with this trick. They say they won't mention it, but then they do, and after that, they distance themselves from it. Retail investors are just destined to be the bag holders, huh.
View OriginalReply0
ApeWithNoChain
· 12-09 17:59
Haha, here we go again. The more this guy tries to clarify, the more people rush in. The traffic secret is just that simple.
View OriginalReply0
GasFeeLady
· 12-09 17:58
honestly the funniest part is watching him try to disclaim everything while the market uses his *not mentioning it* as a trading signal now... that's some next-level MEV psychology right there
Reply0
BtcDailyResearcher
· 12-09 17:51
Haha, it's the same old routine again. As soon as the big shot opens their mouth, the community starts dumping on retail investors. To put it nicely, it's called monetizing traffic; to put it bluntly, it's colluding to fleece everyone.
View OriginalReply0
AirdropHunter420
· 12-09 17:49
Haha, this trick is all too familiar. Every time a big shot speaks up, people rush to mint coins, basically acting as his cash machine.
A certain big shot lost his cool on social media again.
The reason is simple—he casually said "DOYR," and instantly a bunch of copycat tokens with the same name appeared on-chain. This time he couldn't help but jump out and clarify: "I’m just chatting when I post, not writing a project whitepaper for you."
To put it bluntly: Just because I mention DOYR doesn’t mean you can launch $DOYR to fleece retail investors. If things go south, don’t pin it on me.
This isn’t the first time something like this has happened.
Earlier, he showed off his pet dog, named "XILANHUA" (broccoli). What happened? Overnight, more than a dozen $XILANHUA tokens popped up, and a certain public chain was nearly paralyzed by spam contracts.
Later, he brought up a charity project called Giggle Academy, aiming to do education. The community instantly got the idea—launched $GIGGLE, pumped it at open, then dumped it back to the floor price. He had to issue a statement overnight to distance himself.
Now, this guy might as well carve a disclaimer into his DNA: "Even if you turn my catchphrases into meme coins, I’ll keep posting as usual. But the token’s price movement has nothing to do with me."
Bottom line, he knows exactly what's going on:
Retail traders stalk his activity to snipe launches,
Early players cash in on the hype,
Then when it crashes, they come back and blame him for “leading the rug pull.”
Of course, the community isn’t buying it:
“So you rake in the engagement, and we hold the bags?”
“Next time you say ‘drink water,’ is someone going to launch $HESHUI right away?”
The most ironic part—the more he distances himself, the more hyped the market gets. Now "KOL catchphrases = meme coin material" has basically become an industry consensus.
If you ask me, here’s the most likely list of new coins coming up:
$DOYR
$JUSTSAID
$NOTME
As for whether someone will actually launch another $DOYR and run the same play?
Simple.
If he mentions “DOYR” again, you’ll see a string of contract addresses in the comments before you know it.
Crypto never lacks geniuses.
What’s always missing is the last person left holding the bag—you.