There was a time when trading memes felt like magic. One coin after another was turning everyday traders into millionaires overnight. Now, that energy is gone. The charts look tired, the traders look burned, and the dream feels over.
Let’s talk about how we got here—and if meme coins can ever shine again.
Back When It Was Meme Season
Before the mania began, I spotted $PEPE under a 5 million market cap. I actually thought I was too late. Memes just didn’t move that high back then. And to be honest, PEPE didn’t even feel original. I’d seen dozens of frog coins across every chain.
But somehow, this one caught fire. The community rallied behind it like never before. Within a year, it turned into a multi-billion-dollar token. I made a few trades here and there, but missed the 1000x run. That story alone was enough to fuel a global meme movement—the dream of going from peasant to king in one trade.

Solana Took Over
When PEPE exploded, Solana was already building momentum. Ethereum had a bad rep after the NFT gas wars. Retail traders were tired of paying $250 for a transaction. Solana offered what everyone wanted—speed and low fees.
So meme traders moved. And the flood began. $BONK, $POPCAT, $WIF, $FART—the list kept growing. Market caps hit hundreds of millions, even billions. Telegram groups were buzzing 24/7. Every trader thought they could catch the next 100x. For a moment, it really did feel like a new era.
But then came Pump Fun. And it was the beginning of the end.
Pump Fun Changed Everything
Pump Fun made launching a coin easier than ordering a coffee. No coding, no whitepaper, no marketing plan. Just a ticker, an image, and a dream.
In a few months, millions of new coins appeared. And for a short while, it was chaos in the best possible way. Random tokens were mooning daily. Screenshots of 10x and 100x gains filled X timelines. Some early players made life-changing money.
But on-chain reality tells a darker story. Around 99% of people lost money. Most coins went straight to zero within hours. Rugs, insider dumps, fake hype—it became a casino where only the house wins.
Most People Lose Trading Memes
Let’s be honest—almost everyone dreams of catching that 100x or 1000x gem. But for most, it ends with a -80% bag or worse.
Rugs, insiders, FUD, and sniper bots rule the game now. The community members who believe in projects are often just exit liquidity for early whales. It’s brutal.
Retail traders are exhausted. Many tried dozens of memes this year and ended with the same story—instant dump, chart down only. Everyone takes profits fast, and no one dares to hold for the big move anymore. The magic of conviction is gone.
At this point, the only consistent winners are devs, insiders, and bot traders. If you’re playing as a normal user, you’re entering a shark tank with no armor.
The New Meme Economy: PVP Only
You can still trade big memes like $DOGE, $PEPE, or $WIF based on technicals. They’ve got liquidity and cleaner charts. But even there, it’s still a PVP market—one trader’s win is another’s loss.
Behind the scenes, “devs” are launching hundreds of new coins a week. Most are just dumping for quick profits or collecting creator fees worth millions. The game turned from community fun into a pure money grind.
And somehow, influencers now brag about onboarding these same people who wrecked the space (I’m talking to you Orangie). That says enough about how far we’ve drifted from the early meme spirit. It’s the sad current state of the trenches.

Will Meme Coins Ever Come Back?
People will always find a way to gamble. So yes, memes won’t disappear completely. But will we see another season like 2023? Probably not.
The market is tired. There are too many coins fighting for too little liquidity. Retail traders got rinsed, and they don’t forget that pain easily. It’ll take more than hype—it’ll take a few massive success stories—to bring real volume back.
Until then, I’m sitting out. I’m watching trends, keeping an eye on new experiments, but I’m not chasing random tickers anymore. If you do, be careful. It’s a brutal arena, and you’re not guaranteed a comeback.
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Final Words
The meme season gave us incredible stories, from $PEPE millionaires to $BONK believers. But it also left behind scars, empty wallets, and broken communities.
Maybe one day, a new wave of creativity and community will bring the magic back. Until then, memes remain what they’ve always been—fun to watch, dangerous to chase.
f you enjoyed this blog, check out our recent blog about $BTC hitting Extreme Fear Levels.
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