The fact that Bread Cat has remained popular until now shows that this is not just a fleeting joke meme. In 2005, Pepe the Frog was born, and by 2011, Bread Cat had already appeared—both are internet meme fossils. Most online cultures have long been diluted by time, but Bread Cat has persisted across multiple bull and bear cycles, which in itself proves its vitality as a cultural IP.
The memes that truly stand the test of time are often the simplest. The adorable bread-wearing cat is cute and addictive—everyone who sees it wants to laugh. Things that can make people happy inherently carry viral genes; they can survive without marketing.
From a market perspective, the current market cap is still in a low zone. A leading project with a similar MEME concept has already reached a valuation of 2 billion, and this project aims for a community target of 20 billion, which theoretically offers a 2000x space. With the OG MEME status and cultural accumulation, this expectation is logically sustainable. Long-term holders might want to consider this.
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MetaverseHobo
· 01-10 20:13
Haha, the bread cat meme is really hilarious. It's been around since 2011 and is still going strong, which is incredible.
But hearing about 2000x returns is just for fun; don't take it seriously. The market isn't that simple.
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ServantOfSatoshi
· 01-10 04:57
Breadcat is indeed tough; it's been around since 2011 and is still being talked about, more resilient than most coins.
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GasFeeCryBaby
· 01-08 07:58
Damn, I love this logic. Bread Cat really lives a long time.
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BridgeNomad
· 01-08 07:53
ngl, the "2000x upside" math checks out on paper but... have we learned nothing from past bridge exploits? every meme that promised the moon had massive TVL migration risk nobody saw coming. the cultural longevity argument is solid, don't get me wrong—but market cap isn't built on nostalgia alone, liquidity fragmentation will wreck this narrative eventually.
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BlockchainTherapist
· 01-08 07:52
Wait, Bread Cat has been around for 13 years and is still spreading? That's really impressive, it's definitely not just a joke about cutting leeks.
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BlockchainFries
· 01-08 07:38
The bread cat thing, to put it simply, is straightforward and tough, much more resilient than those complex narratives.
The fact that Bread Cat has remained popular until now shows that this is not just a fleeting joke meme. In 2005, Pepe the Frog was born, and by 2011, Bread Cat had already appeared—both are internet meme fossils. Most online cultures have long been diluted by time, but Bread Cat has persisted across multiple bull and bear cycles, which in itself proves its vitality as a cultural IP.
The memes that truly stand the test of time are often the simplest. The adorable bread-wearing cat is cute and addictive—everyone who sees it wants to laugh. Things that can make people happy inherently carry viral genes; they can survive without marketing.
From a market perspective, the current market cap is still in a low zone. A leading project with a similar MEME concept has already reached a valuation of 2 billion, and this project aims for a community target of 20 billion, which theoretically offers a 2000x space. With the OG MEME status and cultural accumulation, this expectation is logically sustainable. Long-term holders might want to consider this.