32E moonbirds, 20E RTFKT, 22E doodles, which one is more worth buying? (1)
32E's moonbirds, 20E's RTFKT, 22E's doodles. Now, win all these 4E! ! What happened to the once blue chip? Which one is more worth buying? In this article, we will make the strongest summary "1". If you just want to know the results, it is enough to see the second article. Thank you everyone for forwarding the discussion
Let me put the conclusion first: Moon Bird! Moon Bird! Moonbird! Among the three, the data on the table are retracement, floor thickness, community consensus, and historical status.
moonbirds are dominant. Hidden ultimate move, Moon Bird is not only physically weak, but also more web3, the boss behind it has a higher rank, and the direct lineage is more cohesive. The problem of Moon Bird is the same as that of C9. The 30E Moon Bird is old and arrogant, while the 4E Moon Bird is mature and stable.
The most anticipated blue chip in March - SteadyStackNFT
In a market where small-picture blue-chips are in short supply, SteadyStackNFT is a "seed" player worth looking forward to in the market in the near future. It can be said that it is a combination of first-generation project foundation + partner background + project web2 empowerment + gameplay concept.
#SVB #BTC It was exactly as predicted. The Federal Reserve took action, SVB was rescued, and the pie returned to 22,000. The Federal Reserve's "central mother" trend is very beneficial to the crypto market in the short term. In the long run, it may be a conflict of "ideas". An obvious truth: If the Federal Reserve is completely reduced to the Treasury Department and even the money printing machine of the United States, will the government allow a trillion-dollar "decentralized" central bank?
Historically, there have only been two central banks in the United States: the First Bank of the United States in 1791 and the Second Bank of the United States in 1816. They both only lived for 20 years because Congress abolished them. The seventh President Jackson's epitaph reads: I killed the bank. In the eyes of the American ideal establishment, a centralized and powerful central bank subordinate to the government seriously violates the American spirit. But now, changes are happening. . .