Back to Basics: Don't Confuse Memecoin with Shitcoin
Original Article Title: "Getting Back to Basics: Distinguishing Between Memecoin and Shitcoin"
Original Article Author: Mannay
Original Article Translation: Azuma, Odaily Planet Daily

Let's get straight to the point: memecoin and shitcoin are two entirely different things.
memecoin—free-spirited, born out of internet culture's collective resonance;
shitcoin—ephemeral, speculative, devoid of soul;
Confusing the two is not just a semantic error but also a cultural dissonance. Calling tokens like TRUMP or LIBRA memecoins is akin to mistaking the shadow for the moon.
"Memes propagate from one brain to another like a virus"—Richard Dawkins, *The Selfish Gene* (1976)
From Dawkins defining meme as a "cultural unit" to DOGE's birth in 2013, memecoin has become the intersection of internet culture and decentralized finance. The key now is to distinguish those true memecoins—products of community humor, shared values, and organic propagation—from shitcoins designed to capitalize on speculative fervor. Mixing the two is not merely a semantic mistake; it undermines the cultural foundation that makes memecoin so alluring. Memecoin is a tradable asset of a story, with its value being merely a byproduct of collective faith.
A meme is not a static image or joke: they are cultural genes that mutate and spread through human interaction. Dawkins' 1976 analogy described memes as "selfish replicators," vying for dominance in the attention economy. Memecoins like DOGE or PEPE also reflect this evolutionary process:
A meme (such as DOGE) mutates into a token, gaining financial utility while retaining its cultural DNA.
The community, as an ecosystem, amplifies memes that can resonate with shared values (humor, rebellion, nostalgia).
The blockchain infrastructure has accelerated the replication process, giving birth to over 40,000 memecoins per day.
Unlike shitcoins lacking cultural adaptability, memecoins thrive by embedding collective memory. They also bridge two eras of internet culture: Web2 and Web3.
In Web2, memes were a centralized commodity. Platforms like Reddit and Twitter monetized viral content through ads, but creators rarely benefited economically. The meme spread through platforms like Reddit or Twitter, but its monetization process was siloed—such as the platform taking the ad revenue instead of the creator. DOGE's rise in 2013 is an example; its community funded charities but lacked ownership of meme's financial value.
Web3 transforms memes into assets of self-sovereignty, where communities monetize their cultural labor. Memes have also become tradable "equity," governed by decentralized communities rather than company algorithms. This shift is revolutionary as memes have evolved from transient content to enduring cultural capital. For example, PEPE reclaimed the Pepe-themed meme from Web2's appropriation, allowing holders to "own" a part of internet history.
True memecoins follow a Darwinian development trajectory:
· Birth: A meme gets tokenized, usually as a form of satire;
· Growth: The community uses humor and nostalgia to build social capital;
· Maturity: Successful memecoins develop quasi-social use cases (holders invest not just for profit but for identity);
· Legacy: Memecoins either fade away (most) or evolve into cultural symbols/community legends. For instance, DOGE's longevity stems from its charitable myth.
Shitcoins circumvent this lifecycle. They are financial zombies—lacking narrative, only harvesting through predatory tactics and pump-and-dump schemes. They lack cultural support, dooming their lifecycle to brevity.
Memecoins actually archive internet subculture onto the blockchain, serving as 21st-century folklore. In contrast, shitcoins lack this emotional resonance, failing to generate community loyalty. They capitalize on trends without contributing to cultural narratives, detaching cryptocurrencies from their "countercultural" roots. They are parasites of memes, fundamentally distinct from memes.
The current true challenge is to maintain cultural integrity. The conflation of memecoin and shitcoin has threatened the cultural foundation of cryptocurrency—exploitative tokens erode trust, low-quality replicas stifle innovation and dilute creativity, volatility and scams attract strict regulations, thus jeopardizing creative freedom…
Let's take a trip down memory lane. DOGE was created by Billy Markus and Jackson Palmer in 2013, initially as a parody of Bitcoin and a tribute to the Doge meme theme. The entire project was filled with self-deprecating humor. However, it was precisely this irony that helped it stand out in an increasingly serious and competitive crypto space. Within a few months, a loyal community (some might call it a "cult") quickly emerged, providing sponsorship for the Jamaican bobsled team at the 2014 Winter Olympics and supporting initiatives such as clean water projects. These early charitable efforts revealed a sense of community spirit beyond speculation.
Susan Blackmore wrote in "The Meme Machine" (1999) that the success of a meme largely depends on its ability to resonate with a shared cultural background. Memecoin achieved this by using humor as a Trojan horse; people gathered around humor, but they stayed for a sense of belonging. Whether posting absurd memes or fundraising for quirky causes, these communities transformed the "attention economy" into tangible economic value. Community interactions, activities, and creations amplified cultural momentum, and digital cross-pollination occurred so rapidly that the surge in memecoin value was often not due to intrinsic utility, but rather to endless humor-driven growth. Over time, if a meme can resonate widely (like DOGE), the token can transcend its initial joke and become an independent cultural symbol.
In contrast, shitcoins lack any meaningful cultural foundation. They exist purely as speculative tools, with their creators leveraging viral marketing and FOMO (fear of missing out) emotions, without contributing anything real to the broader cryptocurrency or cultural ecosystem. The value of memecoin is emotional; the value of shitcoin is transactional.
The cryptocurrency market—especially on chains like Solana, where transactions are fast and cheap—may be inundated by tokens that skyrocket on platforms like pump.fun like mushrooms after the rain, but not all fungi are edible.
As Coindesk reporter Brady Dale wrote in a 2021 article about DOGE: "The real difference is not in the code, but in the narrative."
A shitcoin lacks narrative depth. They lack comedic spark, charitable causes, and a sense of collective participation beyond speculation. The so-called PolitiFi token trend last year, such as MAGA Coin, BODEN, or KAMA, demonstrated how shitcoins latch onto culturally divisive topics (in this case, political themes) to expedite speculation. They do not connect communities but instead capitalize on political sentiment for quick gains. They lack a shareable inside joke and are merely chips in a digital casino, part of a meticulously orchestrated pump-and-dump scheme from start to finish.
As early as 2022, a journalist wrote in The New York Times: "Tokens branded with a political label exploit real-world tension for brief market momentum, leaving a string of disillusioned investors."
We have all seen how this has played out this year. Just because a token can go viral does not mean it inherently holds memecoin status. Memecoins leverage cultural consensus or collective resonance, while shitcoins only parasitize the same viral spread mechanism without any deeper story. Therefore, they burn out quickly.
Noelle Acheson said in a 2021 Decrypt interview: "They are the economic equivalent of 'flash mobs'... The spectacle disappears as quickly as it forms, leaving no lasting cultural imprint."
"Memes are the DNA of our culture. They are constantly changing code spread through collective mimicry and recreation." —Susan Blackmore, The Meme Machine (1999)
Equating memecoins and shitcoins poses a real threat to the legitimacy and artistic charm that true memecoins bring to the cryptocurrency space. Memecoins have historically been the gateway for newcomers to engage with complex financial instruments. When audiences see this field diluted by exploitative tokens devoid of cultural soul, their trust and enthusiasm are eroded.
Memecoins reflect the collective psyche of internet subcultures—Reddit posts, Twitter trends, Discord channels. Shitcoins hollow out the concept of memes, boiling it down to "virality." The result is a market flooded with digital garbage, overshadowing genuinely innovative projects. Genuine memecoins breathe life into internet culture and foster emotional resonance within a global community. DOGE initially succeeded because it was fun, inclusive, and reflected the core of internet humor. Tokens like PEPE continue this tradition. Shitcoins lack this community magic. They are launched by individuals, merely exploiting memes.
This is why calling a shitcoin a memecoin is like calling a billboard slogan high art. The superficial resemblance masks a vast gulf between authenticity and purpose. Memecoins are not just a joke; they are a mirror reflecting the essence of internet culture, while shitcoins are a funhouse mirror— all surface, no substance. Confusing the two is a misunderstanding of both. Culture is fragile; let's not let it fall.
In the words of Richard Dawkins, a meme is a "cultural unit." Let's respect this definition and remember why we entered the cryptocurrency space—not just to make money but to belong.
You may also like

Bloomberg: As Bitcoin Weakens, Stablecoins and RWA Continue to Drive Expansion in Crypto Businesses
In June, Bloomberg reported that despite Bitcoin falling below $60,000 last week, wiping out about $235 billion in market value within seven days, and dropping close to 50% from last year’s peak, some core businesses in the crypto industry are still expanding, mainly in stablecoins, real-world asset tokenization (RWA), payments, and infrastructure. The report also noted that overall altcoin activity has contracted significantly: altcoin market capitalization has fallen from a peak of about $431 billion in November 2021 to around $170 billion, and among the tens of millions of tokens issued in recent years, fewer than 1,700 still maintain meaningful trading activity.

Galaxy Deep Research Report: How Hyperliquid's HIP-4 Upgrade Changes the Landscape of Prediction Markets?

Binance Research: RWA Market Expected to Expand Nearly 6x from Early 2025, with Public Equities and Onchain Payments Heating Up Together
In June, Binance Research said in its monthly market report that the real-world asset (RWA) market is expected to grow by about 589% from the beginning of 2025. Bond- and money market fund-related RWA expanded by about $6.5 billion, up 83% year over year, while publicly traded equity RWAs grew by about 422%. The report also noted that monthly crypto debit card transaction volume exceeded $747 million in May, up 48.6% year to date.

Japan to Assess a Framework for Yen Stablecoins and Crypto ETFs as Asia’s Compliant Payments Narrative Heats Up
Recently, according to the original report, Japan is considering the launch of yen stablecoins and cryptocurrency ETFs. Public information remains limited at this stage, and there is still no complete policy text, regulatory draft, or clear implementation timeline, so this is better characterized as a “policy discussion” rather than formal implementation. The original wording also noted that advancing stablecoin regulation in Asia is driving XRP usage and supporting growth in the XRPL ecosystem. However, based on currently available public information, there is not enough evidence to directly establish a clear causal relationship between this round of discussion in Japan and XRP or XRPL.

ZachXBT: Humanity private key leak and abnormal surge in H token should be viewed separately
On June 9, according to related disclosures, on-chain investigator ZachXBT posted an update on Humanity’s roughly $31 million security incident, saying that after further analyzing fund flows, he currently tends to believe the project team was not involved in an “inside job” or a self-staged attack. According to him, the official explanation about the private key leak was broadly accurate, but before the token unlock, the price of H had been artificially pushed higher, and the hacker later took advantage of that market environment; therefore, the private key leak and the earlier abnormal price pumping should be regarded as two separate and independent events. This reframing has shifted the market’s understanding of the nature of the incident. Earlier discussion around Humanity had focused on whether the team directly participated in the attack or used the security incident to cover up internal operations. ZachXBT’s latest remarks shift the focus from “whether it was self-theft” to “whether there were pre-unlock market structure issues.” He also questioned whether the team may have.

Morning Report | OpenAI has submitted an S-1 registration statement draft to the U.S. SEC; Morpho completes $175 million financing

Morning Report | BitMine increased its holdings by 126,971 ETH last week; trader Eugene announced his exit from the crypto market

Wang Chuan: How can one not feel anxious after the neighbor Old Wang made thirty times profit by investing in storage stocks? (Seven) - A quarter-century cycle

Cryptocurrency CEXs are flocking to sell US stocks, and traditional brokerages are facing an "uninvited guest."

$75 billion in foreign capital has fled, and South Korean retail investors have absorbed it all using leverage

Japan’s Three Megabanks Plan Joint Stablecoin Issuance in Fiscal 2026
MUFG, SMBC, and Mizuho reportedly plan to jointly issue fiat-pegged stablecoins in fiscal 2026, signaling Japan’s growing push into bank-led digital payment infrastructure.

Humanity Discloses H Token Dual-Chain Attack Details, With Losses on Ethereum and BSC Exceeding $36 Million
Humanity said the H token attack across Ethereum and BSC caused more than $36 million in losses after leaked ProxyAdmin keys enabled malicious contract upgrades and token minting.

White House Discusses CLARITY Act With Law Enforcement Ahead of Senate Vote
The White House discussed the CLARITY Act with law enforcement ahead of a Senate vote, focusing on illicit finance risks and developer protections.

Bitcoin Trading Guide 2026: Strategies for Experienced Traders

What Is XAUT and PAXG? Why Tokenized Gold Is Booming in 2026

Will the SpaceX IPO Hurt Bitcoin? Here's What Traders Are Watching

Foreign selling in the South Korean stock market accelerates, with cumulative net sales reportedly reaching $75 billion this year
On June 9, The Kobeissi Letter, citing Goldman Sachs data, reported that global investors are selling South Korean stocks at an unusually rapid pace. In the latest trading session, foreign investors sold about $801 million worth of Kospi constituent stocks again; total foreign outflows last week reached about $10 billion, and the market has been in net foreign selling on nearly every trading day over the past month. According to the data cited in the report, foreign investors have sold about $75 billion worth of South Korean stocks so far this year. Meanwhile, South Korean retail and institutional investors together recorded roughly $69 billion in net buying over the same period, suggesting that the market’s main buying support has come from domestic capital rather than returning overseas funds. The information currently disclosed still mainly comes from The Kobeissi Letter’s retelling and Goldman Sachs data summaries, while public details on the statistical period and the specific definition of “selling” remain relatively limited.

Fortune Warns of Strategy’s Financing Structure Risks as Bitcoin Premium Narrows
Fortune warned that Strategy’s Bitcoin treasury model faces growing financing risks as MSTR’s net asset premium narrows and preferred stock dividend pressure increases.
Bloomberg: As Bitcoin Weakens, Stablecoins and RWA Continue to Drive Expansion in Crypto Businesses
In June, Bloomberg reported that despite Bitcoin falling below $60,000 last week, wiping out about $235 billion in market value within seven days, and dropping close to 50% from last year’s peak, some core businesses in the crypto industry are still expanding, mainly in stablecoins, real-world asset tokenization (RWA), payments, and infrastructure. The report also noted that overall altcoin activity has contracted significantly: altcoin market capitalization has fallen from a peak of about $431 billion in November 2021 to around $170 billion, and among the tens of millions of tokens issued in recent years, fewer than 1,700 still maintain meaningful trading activity.
Galaxy Deep Research Report: How Hyperliquid's HIP-4 Upgrade Changes the Landscape of Prediction Markets?
Binance Research: RWA Market Expected to Expand Nearly 6x from Early 2025, with Public Equities and Onchain Payments Heating Up Together
In June, Binance Research said in its monthly market report that the real-world asset (RWA) market is expected to grow by about 589% from the beginning of 2025. Bond- and money market fund-related RWA expanded by about $6.5 billion, up 83% year over year, while publicly traded equity RWAs grew by about 422%. The report also noted that monthly crypto debit card transaction volume exceeded $747 million in May, up 48.6% year to date.
Japan to Assess a Framework for Yen Stablecoins and Crypto ETFs as Asia’s Compliant Payments Narrative Heats Up
Recently, according to the original report, Japan is considering the launch of yen stablecoins and cryptocurrency ETFs. Public information remains limited at this stage, and there is still no complete policy text, regulatory draft, or clear implementation timeline, so this is better characterized as a “policy discussion” rather than formal implementation. The original wording also noted that advancing stablecoin regulation in Asia is driving XRP usage and supporting growth in the XRPL ecosystem. However, based on currently available public information, there is not enough evidence to directly establish a clear causal relationship between this round of discussion in Japan and XRP or XRPL.
ZachXBT: Humanity private key leak and abnormal surge in H token should be viewed separately
On June 9, according to related disclosures, on-chain investigator ZachXBT posted an update on Humanity’s roughly $31 million security incident, saying that after further analyzing fund flows, he currently tends to believe the project team was not involved in an “inside job” or a self-staged attack. According to him, the official explanation about the private key leak was broadly accurate, but before the token unlock, the price of H had been artificially pushed higher, and the hacker later took advantage of that market environment; therefore, the private key leak and the earlier abnormal price pumping should be regarded as two separate and independent events. This reframing has shifted the market’s understanding of the nature of the incident. Earlier discussion around Humanity had focused on whether the team directly participated in the attack or used the security incident to cover up internal operations. ZachXBT’s latest remarks shift the focus from “whether it was self-theft” to “whether there were pre-unlock market structure issues.” He also questioned whether the team may have.



