In the 1980s, a conman ran to the mountains pretending to be the reincarnation of Tang Seng, claiming he could help people escape their suffering.

The villagers believed him completely, inviting him to weddings and funerals. In just a few years, he swindled a considerable amount of money and lived like an immortal.

Until one night, a village fool killed him and even ate him.

The fool said he saw on television: eating Tang Seng's flesh can grant immortality.

The conman desperately explained that he was a mortal, that he was just scamming money, begging him to spare his life.

But the fool replied, "Could the television deceive me? Could the whole village deceive me? You are an immortal!"

The project teams in the crypto world clearly know they are telling stories,

but retail investors are like that fool, believing Twitter and looking at on-chain data,

thinking they can truly achieve 'immortality'.

In the end, the project went to zero, and the conman disappeared,

the fool still asking, "Could everyone be deceiving me?"

This is not the victory of a scam; it is that too many people believe.

It is the market filled with 'fools waiting to eat Tang Seng's flesh' that makes the conman seem more and more like an immortal.