Why are young people around the world flocking to the cryptocurrency space?

At 44, Zhao Changpeng, founder of Binance, has become the new 'richest Chinese' and 'one of the top ten richest people in the world' in just four years.

Li Xiaolai, an English teacher at New Oriental, became a billionaire overnight by exchanging 100,000 bitcoins for 13.5 billion cash, realizing his dream of sudden wealth.

Guo Hongcai, known as 'Elder Bao', transformed from selling beef to a bitcoin angel investor, dressed in a T-shirt and flip-flops, challenging the suit-and-tie financial professionals, and made a fortune overnight!

Erik Finman, a 17-year-old high school dropout, took the $1,000 his grandmother gave him and invested in bitcoin. Today, he has a net worth in the nine figures. He is a key investor in a Silicon Valley cryptocurrency startup.

Liangxi used a 'suicide strategy' with 1,000 yuan to leverage high multiples, earning nearly 40 million yuan in a single market wave, quickly becoming famous in the cryptocurrency world. Wait a minute...

These myths of rapid wealth in the cryptocurrency space have attracted waves of young people to enter. They firmly believe that an investment of tens of thousands can multiply by at least 1,000 times, with young people globally pouring into the cryptocurrency market, some monitoring the market all night under the temptation of high profits!

In India, 75 million young people have started buying cryptocurrencies; programmers and university students passionately discuss the market at night, even more so than they talk about women.

In the United States, 28 million people are participating; high school students, Silicon Valley folks, and Wall Street people are all involved—it's no longer a niche interest.

South Korea has become a nation of cryptocurrency traders.

In South America and Southeast Asia, the trend is also catching on:

In Brazil, one in every five people is involved in cryptocurrencies, and in Indonesia, over 20 million people have joined in, with momentum that surpasses many developed countries.

Currently, there are 560 million people engaged in the entire cryptocurrency market, with half of them being young people aged 18–34, especially in Asia where the surge is the strongest.

However, most people entering are just paying tuition fees.

From this scale, it's clear this is no longer a simple 'speculation wave'; it might be a real reshaping of the wealth landscape.

In the past, many said 'trading cryptocurrencies is a speculation of the few', but given the current spread, it increasingly seems like a new game being initiated by the younger generation. And how this game unfolds, who will be the last one laughing?