I'm Chovy! When you all come in to play, make sure to play it right!
I feel like a lot of people still don't really get what MemeCore is trying to do.
What it's aiming for might never just be about 'launching meme coins'.
Instead, it's about:
Turning memes from mere hype into a genuine community culture.
Traditional memes often revolve around: hype, emotions, traffic, and short-term speculation.
Once the hype dies down, people scatter.
But MemeCore seems to be attempting:
Community propagation
Real-world interaction
User co-creation
Long-term culture
External influence
Because a truly long-lasting community is fundamentally all about 'people'.
However, the issues are becoming more apparent.
With rewards and hype coming in, bots and studios are also popping up like crazy.
AI spamming. Bulk accounts. Mutual interactions. Meaningless content.
In the short term, the data might look great.
But the long-term harm is actually significant.
Because those who are genuinely creating content, seriously spreading it, and building the community will slowly lose motivation.
People will start to think: 'Is it even worth it to create quality content?'
In the end, what might be left are just bots interacting with each other.
And a platform without real discussions, genuine interactions, or a community vibe will ultimately turn into:
A data farm.
Bots can generate hype, but they can never form a real community culture.
So I think what's most important for Hive right now is not just pure growth.
But rather:
How to maintain the 'real human community' aspect $BSB
I feel like a lot of people still don't really get what MemeCore is trying to do.
What it's aiming for might never just be about 'launching meme coins'.
Instead, it's about:
Turning memes from mere hype into a genuine community culture.
Traditional memes often revolve around: hype, emotions, traffic, and short-term speculation.
Once the hype dies down, people scatter.
But MemeCore seems to be attempting:
Community propagation
Real-world interaction
User co-creation
Long-term culture
External influence
Because a truly long-lasting community is fundamentally all about 'people'.
However, the issues are becoming more apparent.
With rewards and hype coming in, bots and studios are also popping up like crazy.
AI spamming. Bulk accounts. Mutual interactions. Meaningless content.
In the short term, the data might look great.
But the long-term harm is actually significant.
Because those who are genuinely creating content, seriously spreading it, and building the community will slowly lose motivation.
People will start to think: 'Is it even worth it to create quality content?'
In the end, what might be left are just bots interacting with each other.
And a platform without real discussions, genuine interactions, or a community vibe will ultimately turn into:
A data farm.
Bots can generate hype, but they can never form a real community culture.
So I think what's most important for Hive right now is not just pure growth.
But rather:
How to maintain the 'real human community' aspect $BSB