These past weeks of commentary on Solana weren't just noise—they were a reality check. The goal? Redirect attention toward the actual utility players in the Solana ecosystem: projects with real revenue streams, solid fundamentals, and defensible narratives.
Let's be real: the meme cycle has run its course. At least for this phase. Right now, the crowd still chasing quick pumps isn't the demographic that sustains ecosystems. They move on.
What Solana actually needs to thrive is a shift toward substance. Projects that solve real problems, generate actual returns, and build sustainable value. The tech coins—those with genuine use cases and revenue models—are where the real opportunity lies.
The narrative is changing. Memes were fun, but economics matter.
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Whale_Whisperer
· 16h ago
Honestly, the era of meme coins should really come to an end. I'm tired of that stuff.
Fundamentals are the real key, but unfortunately most people are still gambling for quick money.
The SOL ecosystem needs to have some real projects.
This round of shakeout is quite necessary to eliminate those pure gamblers.
Economics > narratives, there's nothing wrong with that.
The difference between genuine projects and pump-and-dump coins is getting bigger and bigger.
Let's wait and see who can survive until the next cycle.
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StakeTillRetire
· 12-28 02:50
I've been saying it for a while—the era of meme coins should come to an end. Only those who react late are now realizing it.
Real gold and silver can sustain life; storytelling alone won't last long.
The Solana ecosystem needs some real substance; otherwise, it will still be abandoned.
Economics is the bottom line, and there's nothing wrong with that statement.
I just want to see which projects can truly survive until next year.
Memes are memes, but money is king... this round of reshuffling is about to begin.
We've hyped it up for so long; now it's finally time to see who is swimming naked.
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BearMarketNoodler
· 12-28 02:50
Someone should have said this earlier: the meme coin trend has passed; now it's time to focus on fundamentals.
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LiquidityNinja
· 12-28 02:49
To be honest, the era of meme coins should indeed come to an end.
Fundamentals are the real hard currency, and this time I'm not just bragging.
Projects within the SOL ecosystem that generate real income with actual cash are the ones worth betting on.
Those who chase daily limit-ups should pack up and leave; they can't sustain the ecosystem.
Economics > meme images, finally someone has spoken out.
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LiquidityWhisperer
· 12-28 02:42
The era of meme coins is indeed coming to an end, really. Right now, those still chasing after daily limit-ups are basically just rookies waiting to be harvested.
Real business models are the real deal; having a good story alone is useless.
Hey, which projects in the Solana ecosystem are truly reliable? It’s hard to tell sometimes.
Economics always outweighs narratives, there's no doubt about that.
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WagmiWarrior
· 12-28 02:27
The era of meme coins should indeed come to an end. Now it's about who can truly generate cash flow.
The Sol ecosystem should undergo a cleanup; only those who remain will have the qualification to win.
Economics > Narratives, this says it all... It's about time to think this way.
Another round of reshuffling, only projects that survive are worth paying attention to.
How can there still be people going all-in on meme coins? Wake up, brother.
The real opportunity lies in fundamentals, not community hype.
These past weeks of commentary on Solana weren't just noise—they were a reality check. The goal? Redirect attention toward the actual utility players in the Solana ecosystem: projects with real revenue streams, solid fundamentals, and defensible narratives.
Let's be real: the meme cycle has run its course. At least for this phase. Right now, the crowd still chasing quick pumps isn't the demographic that sustains ecosystems. They move on.
What Solana actually needs to thrive is a shift toward substance. Projects that solve real problems, generate actual returns, and build sustainable value. The tech coins—those with genuine use cases and revenue models—are where the real opportunity lies.
The narrative is changing. Memes were fun, but economics matter.