I was having dinner with a friend, and she said something that made me wake up. She said: “Right now, there are plenty of projects on the chain, but what’s lacking are those that can survive until next year.” This is absolutely true. In the past two years, Ethereum has seen fewer memes not because there’s a lack of money, but because there aren’t many projects genuinely building community and planning to endure long-term. Most are just flash projects, appearing and then disappearing. Against this backdrop, I recently noticed $NVF Meow Meow Coin, and I see many people talking about it, claiming consensus can reach 1,000,000x. The first thing they did wasn’t to pump the price, but to bind “people” together. You can understand it this way: Previously, when playing with memes, you were just buying a coin; now, with $NVF, you’re entering a “family.” As long as you hold 1 million $NVF, you can get a new Wasa Planet NFT for free. This NFT is not just an image, but your identity badge in this ecosystem. In the future, whether it’s community rights, collaboration, or resources, it will first look at whether you have this “family certificate.” Their logic is very on-chain and very realistic: the coin is responsible for liquidity, the NFT is responsible for identity, and the community is responsible for the long term. I quite agree with this line of thought. The easiest thing to collapse on-chain is not the code, but people’s hearts. But once everyone has common interests and identity binding, it becomes much harder to disperse. Someone asked me if it’s worth paying attention to? I usually don’t give a direct answer, just say one thing: Ethereum hasn’t produced that kind of meme with “ground promotion, a community, and people really working” for a long time. $NVF at least seems to want to make the market into a “home,” not just a “game.” As for whether it can really last until 2026 and become the king of memes, the market will provide the answer. I’m diving in first. CA: 0xb87C087D0f6FBe2F7223C5410291Cb82744102d4 Some projects are about looking at K charts; some projects are about whether we can stay up all night to the next round.