I just saw a project article posted by a big KOL, and there were about 25 replies in the comments. Out of those 25 people, nearly 18 were also big influencers. There are two strange points:

1. The comments from these big influencers are very perfunctory, with no particularly deep responses, unlike the terminology they usually use when researching projects. More commonly, it's: follow, mark, learn. Those who are a bit more thoughtful just reply with a couple of sentences of nonsense.

2. For regular Twitter users, the probability of encountering big influencers is probably less than 1%. In a KOL’s project tweet, the proportion of big influencers in the comments exceeds 80%? That's absurd.

This tweet doesn't appear to be an advertisement, and these big influencers don't seem to be the kind of poorly produced matrix accounts. If you look at some of the big influencers' tweets and their long articles, along with the replies below, you’ll understand. It's those familiar faces from earlier.

These KOLs should be banding together or joining some agency, interacting with each other to increase their followers.

So I don’t think it’s necessary for big KOLs to mock the previous batch of new accounts that engaged in mutual following for blue V badges. Essentially, whether it's a big influencer account or a new account, they are all doing the same thing.

Looking back, out of 25 people, 18 are big influencers, and the remaining 7 replied. For big influencers with tens of thousands of followers, the viewership and interaction are actually quite low, mostly just mutual exposure.