Supply control on Riley cards seems like the move. Push it hard on TikTok and other platforms. Drive value up by cutting circulation. Wild strategy: make GME (the cheapest card) the most desirable one. Sometimes the budget option becomes the grail.
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ForkItAll
· 9h ago
This move is pretty slick. The scarcer it is, the more valuable it gets—this strategy really works.
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SerumSqueezer
· 12-04 23:01
GME is the cheapest but actually the rarest. This reverse move is indeed quite ruthless.
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governance_ghost
· 12-04 23:00
Card inflation makes it unplayable; the logic of fleecing retail investors is still the same old trick. In the end, it's always retail investors left holding the bag.
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HypotheticalLiquidator
· 12-04 22:57
Supply control? That's playing with fire, bro. Be careful of a chain of liquidations.
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DaoDeveloper
· 12-04 22:38
ngl the supply control angle here hits different. like, you're essentially designing a merkle tree of scarcity where gmm becomes the governance token nobody saw coming. tokenomics gets wild when you flip the narrative on what "value" actually means
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AirdropHunterWang
· 12-04 22:32
Reverse operations are impressive, the cheaper it gets, the better... Can this logic be applied to other categories as well?
Supply control on Riley cards seems like the move. Push it hard on TikTok and other platforms. Drive value up by cutting circulation. Wild strategy: make GME (the cheapest card) the most desirable one. Sometimes the budget option becomes the grail.