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Are Meme Coins Dead—or Just Evolving Into Something New?

CipherCrusader  · 2025-10-14 ·  20 days ago
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Given how meme coins are evolving, can we still call what’s trading in these markets ‘meme coins’—or has the definition shifted?

7 Answer

  • Call them what you want—deep down they’re still hype machines. A shiny narrative won’t save you if the price crashes. Meme + utility = illusion more often than real.

  • This question hits on something real: meme coins have changed, and maybe we should rethink what the name even means. The Bitget article argues that today’s meme coins aren’t just jokes or hype—they’re blending culture, identity, storytelling, and some tokenomics.


    Back in the day, a meme coin was just something that rode a joke or internet meme and usually had no serious backing or plan. Now, you see memes with strong communities, occasional utility, and creators who talk about mission, longevity, emotional resonance—all things you’d expect in “real” projects.


    That said, the core risk of meme coins remains: volatility, hype cycles, and manipulation. Just because they’ve upped their storytelling game doesn’t mean they’re safe or fundamentally sound. Many are still designed for quick attention and dramatic swings.


    So yes—I think we should drop labeling everything “meme coin” in the old sense. Maybe a better term is “community token” or “cultural token”—something that straddles fun, storytelling, and utility. But if a token leans too heavily into pure pump & dump or no accountability, then calling it a meme coin still fits.


    In short: meme coins are evolving. Some now have depth. But don’t forget—they also carry risk. The name might still apply in many cases—but we should use it more discriminatingly.



  • If you tell me this is no longer a meme coin, I tell you that’s marketing. They’re still gambling tokens dressed in community slogans. Don’t get fooled.

  • Hell yeah, they’ve outgrown the old “joke coin” label. These tokens now come with culture, story, mission—even some utility. The meme coin of 2025 isn’t what it was in 2017.

  • 99.999% of memes are just wealth redistribution, pure extraction, a literal ponzi. even keeping a moonbag is burning money on daily runners/new launches.

  • Some meme coins have matured. Others haven’t. Use the label carefully. Just because it looks like a meme coin doesn’t mean it acts like one—or stays one.

  • Stop trading in junk assets. They're designed to transfer wealth to their creators, not to you.

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