All of these articles about money, AI, jobs…
How about one for leveling up IRL?
$HUMAN3.0 has 2M views since yesterday and is gaining tons of attention on X.
The best version of yourself is a hedge against an increasingly online world.
All of these articles about money, AI, jobs…
How about one for leveling up IRL?
$HUMAN3.0 has 2M views since yesterday and is gaining tons of attention on X.
The best version of yourself is a hedge against an increasingly online world.
The tungsten ball went viral for having no real purpose, no utility, and no promised value…
except the fact that people keep wanting it. It doesn’t do anything, it doesn’t generate anything.
It just sits there, heavy and absurd, somehow appreciating purely because the internet decided it should.
Cubes are great, but tungsten balls also means you hold!
https://t.co/3tKZDL9S7u
Every cycle the market pretends it’s about innovation, tech, or some new narrative.
And right now that narrative is Goyim, hitting $8M mc today.
But the coins that actually run are the ones that capture a feeling the timeline already has but hasn’t fully articulated yet. Meme markets are emotional markets first and financial markets second. They thrive on identity, frustration, hope, irony, and that constant low-grade sense that “something about the system feels off.”
When a token aligns with that shared but hard-to-define mood, it stops being just a ticker and becomes a social signal. It’s a badge people wear to say “this is the vibe I’m on right now.”
That’s why certain memes suddenly dominate: they act as emotional shorthand for thousands of people processing the same uncertainty, the same disillusionment, the same desire to flip the script.
At the same time, people want familiarity in a meme they already identify with. And it’s this fusion that Goyim is currently missing.
The best fit for the Goyim meta? No character is a better fit than Wojak.
I present, The Goyim Wojak, or $GOYJAK