Remember in February when $BTC made a new low and $Buttcoin proceeded to make a new ATH
There's nothing more humorous and ironic than Buttcoin pumping when Bitcoin is dumping
And Bitcoin looks like 💩 here
What if...
WOJAK got its own card in Moonshot Packs 🎴
In celebration, we're giving away 10 Casual Packs to 10 lucky users.
To enter:
💬 Reply with your Moonshot @username
✅ RT, Like, and Follow @WojakOnX & @Moonshot
Ends 6/5 at 11:59PM ET
I wanted some exposure to the philosophy meta so taking a bet here on $acc
CA: AVZGZmNydDWze9DgyuwX2piWYAUfmf3wprKT44xhpump
Web: https://t.co/bp8bI2wvQf
TG: https://t.co/wMlfbgx0Cu
If you think about it, accelerationism might just be the most crypto-native narrative out there.
Why do you think there are so many that still have /acc in their username?
Shit I'm persuading myself to rock it again.
And if you don't know anything about accelerationism, Nick Land is pretty much the philosophical architect behind it.
His core idea was that technological and economic forces don't really slow down for anyone.
Instead they compound, evolve, and reshape society whether institutions are ready or not.
You don't have to agree with all of Land's conclusions to see why the concept resonates with crypto.
Permissionless networks, digital assets, AI, and global markets all operate on the assumption that innovation is moving forward regardless of who tries to stop it.
Which is why it's kind of fitting that there's a coin built around the idea.
Crypto has always been where people place bets on the future, and $acc is a bet on the philosophy itself.
And what actually gives the coin some merit is Nick Land @xenocosmography actually follows the dev @theelastgod
I think philosophy coins have so much untapped potential and there's no better philosophy for crypto and web3 than accelerationism.
Not financial rice 🍙
So far I’ve earned over $100 worth of $neet and $wojak (on sol) from just 4 posts.
I genuinely think what @Shillz_Official has built is one of the best incentive-based promotion platforms in crypto right now.
It creates a system that’s mutually beneficial for both projects and holders.
For holders, it’s simple: create content and earn tokens you already believe in.
For projects, it’s a way to drive organic growth by rewarding real supporters while keeping full flexibility over:
- the type of content that gets rewarded
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Check to see if any of your projects are running campaigns and start getting rewarded for shilling your favorite coins.
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Everyone should own at least a small bag of $troll to support one of the leading memes that has revived belief in this space which will inevitably run to billions and imo the highest potential beta play that is of the same ilk as troll is $wojak (on sol).
CA: 8J69rbLTzWWgUJziFY8jeu5tDwEPBwUz4pKBMr5rpump
Troll and wojak both emerged from the same early internet meme era and became legacy memes because they evolved beyond simple jokes into timeless symbols of online culture and behavior.
What has made troll timeless is that it perfectly captures the essence of internet trolling, chaos, and the playful act of provoking reactions online.
What has made wojak aka "feels guy" timeless is that it could represent the entire emotional spectrum of online life: hope, fear, cope, excitement, loneliness, irony, and everything in between.
Both have remained relevant because they are foundational internet archetypes. One representing the simple act of trolling and reaction-seeking behavior and the other a blank emotional canvas that can project virtually any human feeling.
These are the types of memes we need to return to and can hold with conviction. Not the latest AI slop characters or agents. Not the latest news based events that can be traded on prediction markets. Not the latest trending words and lingo. Return to memes that simply transmit culture regardless and have stood the test of time.
The neet movement gets misunderstood because most people only see the surface layer: the memes, the trolling, the irony, the ragebait. They see someone say “wagie wagie back to cagie” and assume it’s just laziness disguised as internet humor. But underneath all of that is something much deeper. There’s a growing frustration with modern life and a desire for freedom that a lot of younger people quietly relate to.
The reality is a lot of $neet holders are not even actual neets. They work jobs, go to school, pay bills, and live normal lives. The difference is that being a neet represents something they aspire toward: escaping systems that increasingly feel impossible to win in.
At its core, the movement revolves around freedom.
Freedom from schedules. Freedom from bosses. Freedom from feeling like your entire existence is reduced to productivity metrics and monthly payments. Freedom from spending most of your life working just to barely survive.
On the surface, neets are seen as lazy and unproductive slobs — and to be fair, the mascot has basically been the obese WoW guy from South Park. But that misses the point entirely. A lot of people drawn to the movement are deeply aware of how precious time actually is. Human life is short, yet modern society expects people to sacrifice most of it just to stay afloat.
Previous generations were promised that hard work would lead to stability: buy a home, raise a family, build a future. But for many millennials and zoomers, that social contract feels broken. You can work full-time, stay disciplined, and still feel financially trapped.
I live in Hawaii, which makes this impossible to ignore. People see Hawaii as paradise, but there’s a strange bitterness in living somewhere beautiful while barely having the time or financial freedom to enjoy it. You live in paradise, yet spend most of your life exhausted, overworked, and stressed just trying to survive here.
As someone who grew up in Hawaii and has a family, the cost of living here makes the neet mindset deeply relatable. The average single-family home is nearly a million dollars, which makes even hardworking middle-class people feel locked out of stability. When decades of work no longer guarantee a decent life, cynicism naturally starts to grow.
That’s where the darker undertone of the neet movement comes from.
A lot of the culture is intentionally exaggerated. It mocks office culture, hustle culture, and the endless cycle of waking up, commuting, working, sleeping, and repeating. The memes are funny, but they also reflect a very real feeling: people are starting to question whether endless labor and financial struggle are meaningful ways to spend a life.
And despite the cynicism, there’s also optimism hidden inside the movement.
The goal isn’t simply “doing nothing.” The goal is reclaiming ownership over your own life. That’s why so many younger people are drawn toward alternative paths like content creation, online communities, streaming, freelancing, entrepreneurship, and crypto. Traditional careers no longer feel like guaranteed freedom, so people are searching for leverage and escape elsewhere.
And wouldn't the funniest and most fitting conclusion to this movement be if...
We bought a coin on the internet and never worked again.
Asta explains why he is the biggest Buttcoin holder on fomo...
"the coin has the most insane lore ever, its from 2013, Cobie interacted with it and there was a Buttcoin foundation that the SEC had to ask for the domain, in a sense the lore is its the best coin ever like doge"
"after I bought, a billionaire bought 10% of it, starting posting about it and locked it for 1-2 years, he really likes Buttcoin and I think that's going to push it"
@erozcapital@wojakcto We're not paid we just have an actual community. Look at this post you made. We are the only ones that show up. We have a X group chat that's bigger than your community.
You claim eth whales are buying yet we have more volume and 2x your mcap.
And you blocked my main pussy!
I’m hearing a lot about “Uncs” these days so I’d like to submit my creds as well
- Learned about Bitcoin back in 2011 from Wired magazine when they did an expose on Silk Road
- Created $Buttcoin when the only alt coin around was Litecoin (what happened to that?)
- I own a physical bitcoin back when they cost about $20
- Made my first dollar on the internet from AllAdvantage, a website that would pay you to browse the internet with an ad banner permanently stuck to the top of your screen. The dot com boom was a wild time.
- Before that I used to be involved with E-gold … things (let’s keep this murky). This was the shady proto-internet currency that launched in 1996 and was shut down by the feds the year Bitcoin launched.
- And even before that I used to be a script kiddy that would take over AOL accounts to bypass parental restrictions
- I enjoy drinking beer, mowing my lawn and napping in a hammock on occasion.