🚨 Should Every Coin Be Listed on Binance? Let’s Talk. 🚨👇

Lately, there's been a lot of debate about what coins should (or shouldn’t) be listed on Binance.$BNB

Let me break it down 👇

🔓 Crypto is a Free Market

CEXs (like Binance) and DEXs are all part of one massive liquidity pool. Just because a project isn’t listed on Binance doesn’t mean it ceases to exist. Trading volume simply flows elsewhere—to DEXs, other CEXs, or niche platforms.$BTC

🧭 Capital Always Finds a Way

Whether it’s VC-unlocked tokens, meme coins, local chain favorites, or full-on ponzi-ish "wool pulls"—funds flow across the entire ecosystem.

And with ETFs coming in, even traditional finance capital is starting to pour into crypto, diversifying it even more.$ETH

💼 About VCs

1. Yes, VC backing can inflate token valuations. But here’s the truth:

2. Most VCs operate on a 4+3 year structure (4 years investment, 3 years exit).

3. They charge management fees + carry like in traditional markets.

4. Many crypto VCs are actually going bankrupt today.

5. LPs who backed crypto funds may face total loss.

💡 VC-backed tokens aren't inherently bad. In fact, many have better chances of surviving bear markets. But their success still depends on the project’s fundamentals, not just the funding.

📊 Before Investing, DYOR:

1. What's the token’s utility?

2. How are tokens released/unlocked?

3. What’s the team/investor allocation?

4. What's the initial circulating supply?

There’s no "perfect formula"—but you can protect yourself with research.

⚙️ The Rise of DeFi

DeFi has made markets more liquid and more decentralized. That freedom reduces the control CEXs once had—but that’s the beauty of crypto.

No gatekeepers. No one-size-fits-all rulebook.

📌 In the end, Binance isn’t the entire market—and shouldn’t be.

Embrace the freedom. Respect the risks. And always…

🧠 DYOR.