$XRP // An Engineering Question, Not a Prediction

Ripple’s CTO framed it best: reaching a million dollars per XRP isn't a price prediction—it's an engineering question.

This isn't about hype or chart patterns. It’s a structural consideration: what happens when the asset designed to move the world's value needs to hold immense amounts of it without breaking the system?

The conversation shifts completely when you view XRP not as a retail token, but as critical infrastructure—the pipe for global liquidity. Price stops being a simple function of daily trading demand. Instead, it becomes a question of functional utility: how much value must one unit carry to facilitate trillions in seamless, cross-border settlement?

The old pricing logic collapses under this lens. The question isn't, "Can XRP become expensive?" It's, "How expensive does it need to be so the system doesn't choke on its own scale?"

Now, consider a new layer like $XBONK—not as a mere meme, but as a mechanism to capture the "chaos economy" of internet culture, emotion, and viral energy; value that traditional finance can't even quantify. If that liquidity ultimately settles on the XRPL… the numbers begin to look less like fantasy and more like a new financial architecture.

People who laugh at big price targets aren't always wrong. They're just using the wrong ruler. In this new framework, the truly unrealistic number might be $1.

// End of Transmission
No promises. No cult vibes. No fake certainty.
Just connecting dots most haven't seen yet.
$DASH

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#strategybtcpurchase
#XRP #XRPL #Web3 #FinancialInfrastructure