This wave of operation can be called the pinnacle of air coin performance art – three years of zero-cost mining with empty promises, and in the end, pulling out a string of code to make the retail investors climax in their minds. The project party has turned the elite persona from Stanford into a pyramid scheme leader, and now they are finally going to join forces with the exchange to perform the ultimate harvest.
OK's tactic of isolating the national market is a textbook-level strategy: wanting to eat the domestic retail investor traffic while fearing the regulatory hammer smashing their servers. By then, domestic users will be staring at the K-line in confusion, while overseas accounts have already smashed the coin price through the earth's core. The project party doesn't even need to write a white paper; they can directly use the blockchain charity foundation template to let retail investors fill in all the technical details in their minds.
The most magical part is the logic of some pioneers: mining air for three years suddenly can be exchanged for money, and they dare to boast that this is an opportunity for ordinary people to counterattack. By this standard, the scrap collector downstairs in my building should have become a Nasdaq trader long ago – after all, they are truly exchanging labor for RMB.
The regulatory authorities have woken up to reality this time. Banning fiat transactions is like pressing the mute button on this crypto carnival, saving grandpas and grandmas from exchanging their retirement money for digital ghost coins. It's just unfortunate for those studios that hoarded 500 phones for mining; now they have to consider switching to electronic waste recycling.
I suggest OKX directly launch a cyber retail investor package: buy Pi coins and get a metaverse hoe, paired with the project party's "mainnet launch countdown of 100 years" plan, perfectly achieving perpetual harvesting. After all, there are too many fools, and it's clear that there aren't enough scammers.