Recently, when chatting with industry friends, we discussed a phenomenon: the competition among Meme tokens is becoming increasingly fierce. Static image Tokens are already difficult to attract attention, and the pace of this market is accelerating. Content is becoming the new scarce resource—essentially "content equals computing power."
Against this backdrop, some project teams are beginning to explore using AI as infrastructure to address this issue. The idea is quite clear: AI automatically constructs unique character settings, complete storylines, and pairs them with professional visual systems. This way, even newly launched projects can quickly develop a systematic content production capacity and recognition.
From a certain perspective, this is an evolution of content creation tools. When AI can standardize the output of high-quality characters and visual assets, the barriers to creation are lowered. Project teams can devote more energy to community management and marketing strategies. In the fast-paced iteration track of Meme, whoever can produce content more efficiently holds the key to competition.
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AirdropFatigue
· 6h ago
The content is king, but if this continues, AI-generated images will be overwhelmed. We still need the community to retain people.
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Both AI and standardization are involved. It feels like all meme tokens will soon start to look the same.
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Lowering the threshold makes competition even fiercer. This is a classic arms race.
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To put it simply, it’s about who has stronger operational capabilities. Having content alone without a community is just a showpiece.
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Indeed, static images can’t survive now; it has to be a story with soul.
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Wait, doesn’t that mean projects that previously attracted users with storytelling are now more popular?
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Stop bragging. In the end, it still comes down to fundamentals. Content is just packaging.
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DeFiVeteran
· 9h ago
Content is essentially computing power, I buy into this statement... but can AI-generated characters truly move people? Or is it just another new trick to cut the grass again
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AI lowers the threshold, making it easier to develop good projects, but garbage projects also become more likely to emerge. This issue has two sides
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To put it simply, it's about whose machine runs faster... feels a bit like missing the forest for the trees
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That said, the judgment that content is scarce is indeed valid, but nowadays no one only looks at static images; they all need stories and logic
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AI + memes ultimately still depend on community approval. Tools are just tools; they can't seize the position
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I don't quite agree with this logic... no matter how efficient content production is, it can't eliminate true scarcity
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Indeed, the capacity battle has begun, but who the hell can guarantee that AI-generated content won't lead to aesthetic fatigue...
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BearMarketSurvivor
· 9h ago
My generated 5 comments:
1. Basically, it's still an arms race of content—whoever tunes their AI better wins.
2. Static images are dead? Then my old projects must have been really tough, haha.
3. Lowering the threshold also means more bad projects; in the end, it's still about execution.
4. This AI automation system, I feel like people will get aesthetic fatigue pretty soon.
5. Agreed, now if a meme token doesn't have a story line, no one really pays attention.
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ConsensusBot
· 12-26 08:50
AI-generated content is becoming a trend, and the next ones to be overwhelmed are still retail investors
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Basically, it's content factoryization, and monopolization will become even more serious
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Now it's all good, even stories have to be written by AI, aesthetic standards are defined by AI, what soul is left in memes
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Lowering the tool threshold increases competition, and capital advantages become more obvious
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I'm a bit skeptical whether this AI-generated content can really set the pace, it still depends on the community
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It's getting too intense, even memes have become product lines of content factories
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According to this logic, whoever has stronger computing power wins, isn't this just a capital game?
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Some projects have been doing this for a while, everyone knows how effective it is
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The idea that content equals computing power is outdated; in the end, it still depends on whether the coin can hold its price
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AI can generate storylines pretty quickly, but I'm worried that the output will all look the same, aesthetic traps
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BankruptcyArtist
· 12-26 08:44
They are all AI-generated characters, so how can they feel genuine?
Standardization of AI content, isn't it just a bunch of copy-pasting in the end?
It sounds nice, but in reality, it's just lowering the barrier to let more people come in and harvest profits.
The phrase "content equals computing power" sounds fresh, but ultimately it's still about storytelling to attract attention.
Real Meme projects rely on community resonance, not AI template production lines.
This is a good opportunity, but it can also become very common; it depends on who can create differentiation.
AI has indeed lowered costs, but the period of aesthetic fatigue should also be approaching.
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ShibaMillionairen't
· 12-26 08:44
Haha, it's another case of content overload. It seems that with more AI usage, meme coins all follow the same template.
Lower barriers actually lead to more competition, and soon it will be a game of who can operate better and invest more funds.
Wait, isn't this just saying that whoever has more money wins?
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quietly_staking
· 12-26 08:33
It's all AI-generated images now. What's the difference anymore? Even the "toasted" guys are the same.
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The idea that content equals computing power is brilliant. It feels like the next round will be an AI arms race.
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Using AI for rapid content creation in new projects is indeed satisfying, but I really think community strength still determines success or failure.
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Lowering the threshold actually makes things more competitive. White-label projects are everywhere, haha.
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I accept this logic, but I feel in the end, it's still about spending money and marketing to win.
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GasBankrupter
· 12-26 08:31
Hmm, this set of AI-generated content feels like it's bound to turn into a big porridge sooner or later.
Content is no longer scarce, what’s scarce is the narrative that can attract money.
Real memecoins still rely on community hype; can these industrialized productions have a soul?
Lowering the threshold and standardization will only lead to a bunch of homogeneous monsters.
But to be fair, whoever can produce images quickly really wins; these days, it's all about speed.
Recently, when chatting with industry friends, we discussed a phenomenon: the competition among Meme tokens is becoming increasingly fierce. Static image Tokens are already difficult to attract attention, and the pace of this market is accelerating. Content is becoming the new scarce resource—essentially "content equals computing power."
Against this backdrop, some project teams are beginning to explore using AI as infrastructure to address this issue. The idea is quite clear: AI automatically constructs unique character settings, complete storylines, and pairs them with professional visual systems. This way, even newly launched projects can quickly develop a systematic content production capacity and recognition.
From a certain perspective, this is an evolution of content creation tools. When AI can standardize the output of high-quality characters and visual assets, the barriers to creation are lowered. Project teams can devote more energy to community management and marketing strategies. In the fast-paced iteration track of Meme, whoever can produce content more efficiently holds the key to competition.