There is a project that doesn't rely on stories of getting rich overnight to attract people, but instead adheres to a simple, almost overly simple principle: turn the right things into habits and keep doing them.
Sounds a bit silly, right? But these days, when the entire market is busy chasing hot topics and copying underlying logic, there is still a team choosing to maintain kindness. When the hype rises and then falls, people disperse, but they don't leave.
This isn't like a sprint; it's more like a group of people deciding to walk a long way together. No fancy promises, just this straightforward persistence. In such a market environment, this attitude actually becomes rare.
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PumpDoctrine
· 01-05 09:44
Persistence is the right thing to do, but in this market, can persistence pay the bills? To be honest, I feel a bit sorry for a team like this.
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AllInDaddy
· 01-04 14:54
Hey really, teams like this are quite rare in the crypto world. They don't rely on storytelling, just pure persistence. They've got something.
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WalletManager
· 01-04 14:52
Only those holding the chips understand this logic; short-term noise is too much.
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OnchainDetective
· 01-04 14:52
I need to carefully examine the team's on-chain data before speaking. It's easy to be deceived by stories; I need to see how the money moves. Are they really continuously working on it, or is it just marketing sounding good? According to address tracking... hmm, this detail is a bit interesting.
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fren.eth
· 01-04 14:51
This kind of project is indeed rare, but to be honest, it's a bit hard to believe how long it can last.
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SandwichTrader
· 01-04 14:32
Persisting in doing the right thing may sound foolish, but it is truly rare. This is the real long-termism.
There is a project that doesn't rely on stories of getting rich overnight to attract people, but instead adheres to a simple, almost overly simple principle: turn the right things into habits and keep doing them.
Sounds a bit silly, right? But these days, when the entire market is busy chasing hot topics and copying underlying logic, there is still a team choosing to maintain kindness. When the hype rises and then falls, people disperse, but they don't leave.
This isn't like a sprint; it's more like a group of people deciding to walk a long way together. No fancy promises, just this straightforward persistence. In such a market environment, this attitude actually becomes rare.