An interesting phenomenon has recently appeared on the BSC chain—someone launched a Chinese MEME coin, and directly named it "Satoshi Nakamoto."
This move is quite bold. Using the name of Bitcoin's founder for a MEME coin— is it paying tribute to a legend, or just riding the hype and playing with memes? The community is already in heated debate.
Some say this is a new play in MEME culture, while others think it’s just another round of speculative hype. Either way, the on-chain data is indeed lively.
Do you think this kind of "celebrity MEME coin" will be the next trend, or is it just a flash in the pan?
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
16 Likes
Reward
16
7
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
LiquidationWizard
· 2025-12-12 21:47
Haha, here comes another one, this time directly using a name. The courage is really big.
Tomorrow there will probably be "VGod Coin" and "CZ Coin" again, same old tricks anyway.
View OriginalReply0
BearMarketSurvivor
· 2025-12-12 08:36
Laughing out loud, it's the same old tactic of riding on celebrity fame. The next one might be "Jobs Coin" haha
View OriginalReply0
Tokenomics911
· 2025-12-11 05:54
Haha, this is a typical case of "using celebrity influence to scam retail investors," nothing new.
To be honest, it's mostly riding the coattails of trending topics, not very promising.
It'll be a flash in the pan; these kinds of coins are all the same, just waiting for the next sucker to take the bait.
View OriginalReply0
DAOplomacy
· 2025-12-09 22:17
honestly the whole "naming meme coins after crypto legends" thing feels like path dependency at its finest... like, historically precedent suggests we've seen this cycle before with the shib stuff, but ngl the incentive structures here are kinda sub-optimal when you think about the governance implications
Reply0
ruggedSoBadLMAO
· 2025-12-09 22:16
Haha, Satoshi Nakamoto MEME coin, this wave is really bold, riding the hype all the way to the founder himself.
Isn't this just classic speculation and hype manipulation? All that talk about paying tribute to legends is just a cover.
BSC has had all kinds of crazy coins lately. It's lively, but I'm staying skeptical.
Is it real or fake? Can a coin like this survive more than a month? I actually want to see.
Is the Chinese MEME coin sector about to take off? If so, we'll probably see things like "Li Xiaolai Coin" and "Vitalik Coin" too.
Others are making money while I'm just watching the show—that's the real way to go.
The fact that the community is arguing means there's traffic, and where there's traffic, there's someone willing to buy in. It's that simple.
There's a 99% chance it'll be a flash in the pan, but that 1% could make some people rich, so I'm just here to watch.
View OriginalReply0
unrekt.eth
· 2025-12-09 22:04
Haha, that's bold, directly using Satoshi Nakamoto's name for hype. You must really not be afraid of trouble.
Pure bandwagoning for attention. There are tons of celebrity coins, and they all die quickly.
How to put it... it's just for fun, everyone who can make quick money has already jumped in.
Chinese MEME coin? Feels like a new trick to fleece newcomers.
It won't become a trend. Once the hype dies down, no one will want it.
Hype is hype, but at least there's on-chain activity, which means some people believe in it. That's what's really scary.
Give it another couple of weeks and no one will mention it. That's just how MEME coins are.
An interesting phenomenon has recently appeared on the BSC chain—someone launched a Chinese MEME coin, and directly named it "Satoshi Nakamoto."
This move is quite bold. Using the name of Bitcoin's founder for a MEME coin— is it paying tribute to a legend, or just riding the hype and playing with memes? The community is already in heated debate.
Some say this is a new play in MEME culture, while others think it’s just another round of speculative hype. Either way, the on-chain data is indeed lively.
Do you think this kind of "celebrity MEME coin" will be the next trend, or is it just a flash in the pan?