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Bitcoin's identity crisis is now staring us in the face.
Looking back to the original intention, when Bitcoin emerged, it was based on a promise—absolute security. This feature made it the synonym for digital assets and the core attraction for early adopters. But now, this halo is gradually fading. When some governments start freezing, confiscating crypto assets under various pretexts, or even directly intervening in the market, the story of Bitcoin's "absolute security" begins to show cracks. People start asking themselves: Is owning Bitcoin really safe? If certain rules are violated, their assets could still be confiscated.
This doubt is rooted in every participant's mind, but the answer is harsh—the actual security is indeed weakening. To restore trust in Bitcoin, merely fixing the security narrative is no longer enough. Bitcoin needs a new story, a new perspective, a new value proposition to rekindle people's enthusiasm.
Interestingly, different types of investors have vastly different views on this issue. Retail investors care less about security and more about returns—the speculative potential is what they truly care about. Institutional giants, on the other hand, see security as the bottom line, and speculation is relatively unimportant. Some government policies, short-sighted as they are, inadvertently accelerate this divergence, directly destroying the foundational idea of Bitcoin as a "reserve asset." Who would consider something that could be confiscated at any time as a reserve?
Under this situation, Bitcoin needs a new narrative to support it. Since security is no longer a viable path, speculation might become the new main storyline. This means Bitcoin's market performance will become more volatile, with large fluctuations becoming commonplace, and big ups and downs becoming the new normal. In this environment filled with uncertainty, emerging tokens might actually find new opportunities—because they don't carry the baggage of security, and can more directly embrace their speculative nature, meeting the market's demand for high risk and high reward.