Recently, the “get rich quick” predictions about XRP have once again flooded social media, with one of the most exaggerated claims being:
Holding 3,500 XRP can make you a millionaire in a short period of time.
In response, analyst Vincent Scott publicly poured cold water on this idea.
In his view, such statements are less analysis and more marketing rhetoric—with only one goal: to generate emotion rather than explain reality.
Mathematics itself already explains the issue clearly
Scott directly presented a simple calculation:
To reach 1 million USD with 3,500 XRP,
the price per coin would need to approach 286 USD.
And given the current XRP price of about 2 USD,
this means a more than 14,000% increase.
Scott believes that expecting such a level of rise in the short term,
completely ignores liquidity scale, regulatory environment, and historical price behavior,
lacking basic logical foundation.
He emphasizes that this is not a denial of XRP’s long-term potential,
but a reminder about time scales and real-world constraints.
Why do these predictions always go viral?
Scott also admits,
the reason these extreme predictions keep appearing,
is very simple: they are innately easy to spread.
The more exaggerated the numbers,
the easier it is to attract likes, shares, and subscriptions.
He even bluntly states:
If he himself casually posts a “million-dollar prediction unsupported by data,”
his account data would likely skyrocket immediately.
Worse still,
these predictions almost have no cost of failure.
When time proves the judgment wrong,
the posts are quietly deleted,
but the fans and influence remain.
The “familiar script” of the XRP community
Scott points out that this is not the first time.
In every cycle,
XRP tends to see similar extreme narratives:
“Early holders are about to gain generational wealth”
“Some policy or ETF will immediately create millionaires”
But reality often turns out very differently.
For example, after the spot XRP ETF launched in November last year,
XRP did not surge,
but instead fell from 2.52 USD to 1.80 USD,
and only gradually stabilized afterward.
The gap between promises of “instant wealth” is quite significant.
What is he really trying to say?
Scott’s core message is not “bearish on XRP,”
but a call for:
less emotion, more context.
Optimism is not the problem,
the issue is timelines and assumptions detached from reality.
In a market already characterized by high volatility,
if basic constraints are ignored,
predictions become just noise.
He hopes the market can better distinguish:
what is data-driven analysis,
and what is merely narrative serving traffic.
This boundary,
for investors,
is more important than any price target.
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.
3,500 XRP coins to become a millionaire? An analyst straightforwardly says: this narrative doesn't hold water
Recently, the “get rich quick” predictions about XRP have once again flooded social media, with one of the most exaggerated claims being: Holding 3,500 XRP can make you a millionaire in a short period of time.
In response, analyst Vincent Scott publicly poured cold water on this idea.
In his view, such statements are less analysis and more marketing rhetoric—with only one goal: to generate emotion rather than explain reality.
Mathematics itself already explains the issue clearly
Scott directly presented a simple calculation: To reach 1 million USD with 3,500 XRP, the price per coin would need to approach 286 USD.
And given the current XRP price of about 2 USD, this means a more than 14,000% increase.
Scott believes that expecting such a level of rise in the short term, completely ignores liquidity scale, regulatory environment, and historical price behavior, lacking basic logical foundation.
He emphasizes that this is not a denial of XRP’s long-term potential, but a reminder about time scales and real-world constraints.
Why do these predictions always go viral?
Scott also admits, the reason these extreme predictions keep appearing, is very simple: they are innately easy to spread.
The more exaggerated the numbers, the easier it is to attract likes, shares, and subscriptions.
He even bluntly states: If he himself casually posts a “million-dollar prediction unsupported by data,” his account data would likely skyrocket immediately.
Worse still, these predictions almost have no cost of failure. When time proves the judgment wrong, the posts are quietly deleted, but the fans and influence remain.
The “familiar script” of the XRP community
Scott points out that this is not the first time.
In every cycle, XRP tends to see similar extreme narratives:
But reality often turns out very differently.
For example, after the spot XRP ETF launched in November last year, XRP did not surge, but instead fell from 2.52 USD to 1.80 USD, and only gradually stabilized afterward.
The gap between promises of “instant wealth” is quite significant.
What is he really trying to say?
Scott’s core message is not “bearish on XRP,” but a call for: less emotion, more context.
Optimism is not the problem, the issue is timelines and assumptions detached from reality.
In a market already characterized by high volatility, if basic constraints are ignored, predictions become just noise.
He hopes the market can better distinguish: what is data-driven analysis, and what is merely narrative serving traffic.
This boundary, for investors, is more important than any price target.