Original Title: Narrative Crypto vs Usable Crypto Original author: @yashhsm Compiled by: Peggy, BlockBeats Editor's Note: In the crypto world, we're often swept up in narratives and technologies, making it difficult to discern our direction. The author of this article proposes an insightful framework: dividing the crypto world into two camps: "narrative crypto" and "usable crypto." The former drives attention through storytelling, while the latter drives value through products. These two forces are both contradictory and complementary, forming the dual driving forces of the crypto ecosystem. Whether you're a builder or a trader, this article will help you re-examine your positioning and strategy, understanding how attention translates into adoption and how narratives feed back into products. The following is the original text: Usable Crypto and Narrative Crypto I used to think of the crypto world as a whole, but recently my whole perspective has shifted and I now always see the crypto world as divided into two main areas, especially from a builder’s perspective: Narrative Crypto and Usable Crypto. Next I will explain how to understand these two and how to build products or make money based on them. Usable Crypto They are often the “best in business”: wallets (e.g. @phantom, @MetaMask); stablecoins (e.g. USDT, USDC); exchanges (e.g. @HyperliquidX, @Raydium, @JupiterExchange); startup platforms (e.g. @pumpdotfun); robots and trading terminals (e.g. @AxiomExchange); DeFi protocols (e.g. @aave, @kamino, @LidoFinance), and so on. These products actually work and can generate huge revenue. Narrative Crypto Typically have a grand story or vision (market cap of $100B+) that is powerful enough to change the world: Bitcoin (the narrative of "better money" or "digital gold"); AI x Crypto (most GPU infrastructure and agent frameworks); decentralized science (DeSci) or intellectual property projects (such as Story Protocol); new L1/L2 (such as stablecoin-driven L1 or perpetual contract L2); privacy coins (such as @Zcash); restaking and other infrastructure projects; x402 These projects generate little to no revenue, but their powerful narratives attract both institutional and retail investors, driving up the value of their tokens. The two are not mutually exclusive, but can complement each other for example: Zcash’s daily transaction volume is actually quite low (5–10k transactions per day), but its current “privacy” narrative is very strong, so it has gained a lot of attention. This attention may in turn drive its usability (see the recent surge in transaction volume). Another example: The x402 launched by @CoinbaseDev has almost no actual use, but has recently become a hot topic, and speculation will also bring more attention and use. I always think of this as a spectrum: Both are equally important because they reinforce each other: Narrative Crypto → Sparks Speculation → Drives Usable Crypto Adoption In usable encryption, the product (user) is king; In narrative crypto, community is king. The Builder's Dilemma Every builder faces a question: should they build a narrative project or a usable project? A simple criterion: If you’re good at grabbing attention and charismatic enough to start a movement (or if you’re “scammy enough” — that’s a skill and a compliment!), then you should build a narrative crypto project. For example, if you're good at token economics, CEX listings, and networking, then you should focus on building a grand narrative and vision. Once the narrative is strong enough, it can become useful—like Solana, where capital attracted talent and ultimately made the chain practical. If you want to build a narrative with a market cap of $1B+, you have to start from first principles and think about the unique possibilities that crypto technology can enable. Is this vision compelling enough? If realized, can it support a $100 billion+ market? Is it attractive enough for retail investors? (For example, Plasma, while not yet in use, achieved a $14 billion valuation at its TGE thanks to the narrative of a "$1 trillion stablecoin market.") If you’re good at product, you should build usable crypto projects — projects that solve a problem in a niche market (like Axiom for memecoin traders, or a DeFi protocol). The core of usable crypto is building products that traders (or crypto natives) need directly (such as terminals/exchanges) or indirectly (such as stablecoins). This doesn't necessarily serve speculation; the same product can also have non-speculative uses (such as using a stablecoin for payments). In addition, narrative is also important here (for example, Polymarket’s narrative is “prediction market”) - narrative is marketing. Of course, you can build both at the same time, but it’s best to focus on one at first and build a strong advantage in it. Finding your “edge advantage” is the key. For traders You’re always betting on narrative. You’re betting on the narratives you believe will have the most promise in the coming weeks, months, or even years. Everyone who trades tokens is essentially playing the game of “attention arbitrage”—buying projects that are gaining attention and selling projects that are outdated. For example, the rotation from perpetual contract coins to privacy coins to AI coins. You bet on the teams within a given narrative that you think have the best chance of gaining traction and becoming the alpha or beta project within that narrative. If they do, your bet will take off. TL;DR Usable encryption and narrative encryption are two equally important aspects of the encryption world. As a builder, you should choose a direction at the beginning and strive for perfection in it. Once you have established a foothold in one direction, you can expand to another direction, which is the ultimate goal. I learned this the hard way while running a full-time business over the past year. I used to think in the middle of the road, and ended up accomplishing nothing. But at the end of the day, it's a game - and you have to play by the market's rules.Original Title: Narrative Crypto vs Usable Crypto Original author: @yashhsm Compiled by: Peggy, BlockBeats Editor's Note: In the crypto world, we're often swept up in narratives and technologies, making it difficult to discern our direction. The author of this article proposes an insightful framework: dividing the crypto world into two camps: "narrative crypto" and "usable crypto." The former drives attention through storytelling, while the latter drives value through products. These two forces are both contradictory and complementary, forming the dual driving forces of the crypto ecosystem. Whether you're a builder or a trader, this article will help you re-examine your positioning and strategy, understanding how attention translates into adoption and how narratives feed back into products. The following is the original text: Usable Crypto and Narrative Crypto I used to think of the crypto world as a whole, but recently my whole perspective has shifted and I now always see the crypto world as divided into two main areas, especially from a builder’s perspective: Narrative Crypto and Usable Crypto. Next I will explain how to understand these two and how to build products or make money based on them. Usable Crypto They are often the “best in business”: wallets (e.g. @phantom, @MetaMask); stablecoins (e.g. USDT, USDC); exchanges (e.g. @HyperliquidX, @Raydium, @JupiterExchange); startup platforms (e.g. @pumpdotfun); robots and trading terminals (e.g. @AxiomExchange); DeFi protocols (e.g. @aave, @kamino, @LidoFinance), and so on. These products actually work and can generate huge revenue. Narrative Crypto Typically have a grand story or vision (market cap of $100B+) that is powerful enough to change the world: Bitcoin (the narrative of "better money" or "digital gold"); AI x Crypto (most GPU infrastructure and agent frameworks); decentralized science (DeSci) or intellectual property projects (such as Story Protocol); new L1/L2 (such as stablecoin-driven L1 or perpetual contract L2); privacy coins (such as @Zcash); restaking and other infrastructure projects; x402 These projects generate little to no revenue, but their powerful narratives attract both institutional and retail investors, driving up the value of their tokens. The two are not mutually exclusive, but can complement each other for example: Zcash’s daily transaction volume is actually quite low (5–10k transactions per day), but its current “privacy” narrative is very strong, so it has gained a lot of attention. This attention may in turn drive its usability (see the recent surge in transaction volume). Another example: The x402 launched by @CoinbaseDev has almost no actual use, but has recently become a hot topic, and speculation will also bring more attention and use. I always think of this as a spectrum: Both are equally important because they reinforce each other: Narrative Crypto → Sparks Speculation → Drives Usable Crypto Adoption In usable encryption, the product (user) is king; In narrative crypto, community is king. The Builder's Dilemma Every builder faces a question: should they build a narrative project or a usable project? A simple criterion: If you’re good at grabbing attention and charismatic enough to start a movement (or if you’re “scammy enough” — that’s a skill and a compliment!), then you should build a narrative crypto project. For example, if you're good at token economics, CEX listings, and networking, then you should focus on building a grand narrative and vision. Once the narrative is strong enough, it can become useful—like Solana, where capital attracted talent and ultimately made the chain practical. If you want to build a narrative with a market cap of $1B+, you have to start from first principles and think about the unique possibilities that crypto technology can enable. Is this vision compelling enough? If realized, can it support a $100 billion+ market? Is it attractive enough for retail investors? (For example, Plasma, while not yet in use, achieved a $14 billion valuation at its TGE thanks to the narrative of a "$1 trillion stablecoin market.") If you’re good at product, you should build usable crypto projects — projects that solve a problem in a niche market (like Axiom for memecoin traders, or a DeFi protocol). The core of usable crypto is building products that traders (or crypto natives) need directly (such as terminals/exchanges) or indirectly (such as stablecoins). This doesn't necessarily serve speculation; the same product can also have non-speculative uses (such as using a stablecoin for payments). In addition, narrative is also important here (for example, Polymarket’s narrative is “prediction market”) - narrative is marketing. Of course, you can build both at the same time, but it’s best to focus on one at first and build a strong advantage in it. Finding your “edge advantage” is the key. For traders You’re always betting on narrative. You’re betting on the narratives you believe will have the most promise in the coming weeks, months, or even years. Everyone who trades tokens is essentially playing the game of “attention arbitrage”—buying projects that are gaining attention and selling projects that are outdated. For example, the rotation from perpetual contract coins to privacy coins to AI coins. You bet on the teams within a given narrative that you think have the best chance of gaining traction and becoming the alpha or beta project within that narrative. If they do, your bet will take off. TL;DR Usable encryption and narrative encryption are two equally important aspects of the encryption world. As a builder, you should choose a direction at the beginning and strive for perfection in it. Once you have established a foothold in one direction, you can expand to another direction, which is the ultimate goal. I learned this the hard way while running a full-time business over the past year. I used to think in the middle of the road, and ended up accomplishing nothing. But at the end of the day, it's a game - and you have to play by the market's rules.

Narrative vs. Utility: Which Token is Worth the Investment?

2025/10/29 08:00

Original Title: Narrative Crypto vs Usable Crypto

Original author: @yashhsm

Compiled by: Peggy, BlockBeats

Editor's Note: In the crypto world, we're often swept up in narratives and technologies, making it difficult to discern our direction. The author of this article proposes an insightful framework: dividing the crypto world into two camps: "narrative crypto" and "usable crypto." The former drives attention through storytelling, while the latter drives value through products. These two forces are both contradictory and complementary, forming the dual driving forces of the crypto ecosystem. Whether you're a builder or a trader, this article will help you re-examine your positioning and strategy, understanding how attention translates into adoption and how narratives feed back into products.

The following is the original text:

Usable Crypto and Narrative Crypto

I used to think of the crypto world as a whole, but recently my whole perspective has shifted and I now always see the crypto world as divided into two main areas, especially from a builder’s perspective: Narrative Crypto and Usable Crypto.

Next I will explain how to understand these two and how to build products or make money based on them.

Usable Crypto

They are often the “best in business”: wallets (e.g. @phantom, @MetaMask); stablecoins (e.g. USDT, USDC); exchanges (e.g. @HyperliquidX, @Raydium, @JupiterExchange); startup platforms (e.g. @pumpdotfun); robots and trading terminals (e.g. @AxiomExchange); DeFi protocols (e.g. @aave, @kamino, @LidoFinance), and so on.

These products actually work and can generate huge revenue.

Narrative Crypto

Typically have a grand story or vision (market cap of $100B+) that is powerful enough to change the world: Bitcoin (the narrative of "better money" or "digital gold"); AI x Crypto (most GPU infrastructure and agent frameworks); decentralized science (DeSci) or intellectual property projects (such as Story Protocol); new L1/L2 (such as stablecoin-driven L1 or perpetual contract L2); privacy coins (such as @Zcash); restaking and other infrastructure projects; x402

These projects generate little to no revenue, but their powerful narratives attract both institutional and retail investors, driving up the value of their tokens.

The two are not mutually exclusive, but can complement each other

for example:

Zcash’s daily transaction volume is actually quite low (5–10k transactions per day), but its current “privacy” narrative is very strong, so it has gained a lot of attention. This attention may in turn drive its usability (see the recent surge in transaction volume).

Another example: The x402 launched by @CoinbaseDev has almost no actual use, but has recently become a hot topic, and speculation will also bring more attention and use.

I always think of this as a spectrum:

Both are equally important because they reinforce each other:

Narrative Crypto → Sparks Speculation → Drives Usable Crypto Adoption

In usable encryption, the product (user) is king;

In narrative crypto, community is king.

The Builder's Dilemma

Every builder faces a question: should they build a narrative project or a usable project?

A simple criterion:

If you’re good at grabbing attention and charismatic enough to start a movement (or if you’re “scammy enough” — that’s a skill and a compliment!), then you should build a narrative crypto project.

For example, if you're good at token economics, CEX listings, and networking, then you should focus on building a grand narrative and vision. Once the narrative is strong enough, it can become useful—like Solana, where capital attracted talent and ultimately made the chain practical.

If you want to build a narrative with a market cap of $1B+, you have to start from first principles and think about the unique possibilities that crypto technology can enable.

Is this vision compelling enough? If realized, can it support a $100 billion+ market? Is it attractive enough for retail investors? (For example, Plasma, while not yet in use, achieved a $14 billion valuation at its TGE thanks to the narrative of a "$1 trillion stablecoin market.")

If you’re good at product, you should build usable crypto projects — projects that solve a problem in a niche market (like Axiom for memecoin traders, or a DeFi protocol).

The core of usable crypto is building products that traders (or crypto natives) need directly (such as terminals/exchanges) or indirectly (such as stablecoins). This doesn't necessarily serve speculation; the same product can also have non-speculative uses (such as using a stablecoin for payments).

In addition, narrative is also important here (for example, Polymarket’s narrative is “prediction market”) - narrative is marketing.

Of course, you can build both at the same time, but it’s best to focus on one at first and build a strong advantage in it. Finding your “edge advantage” is the key.

For traders

You’re always betting on narrative.

You’re betting on the narratives you believe will have the most promise in the coming weeks, months, or even years.

Everyone who trades tokens is essentially playing the game of “attention arbitrage”—buying projects that are gaining attention and selling projects that are outdated. For example, the rotation from perpetual contract coins to privacy coins to AI coins.

You bet on the teams within a given narrative that you think have the best chance of gaining traction and becoming the alpha or beta project within that narrative. If they do, your bet will take off.

TL;DR

Usable encryption and narrative encryption are two equally important aspects of the encryption world.

As a builder, you should choose a direction at the beginning and strive for perfection in it. Once you have established a foothold in one direction, you can expand to another direction, which is the ultimate goal.

I learned this the hard way while running a full-time business over the past year. I used to think in the middle of the road, and ended up accomplishing nothing.

But at the end of the day, it's a game - and you have to play by the market's rules.

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.
Share Insights

You May Also Like

Crypto News: Donald Trump-Aligned Fed Governor To Speed Up Fed Rate Cuts?

Crypto News: Donald Trump-Aligned Fed Governor To Speed Up Fed Rate Cuts?

The post Crypto News: Donald Trump-Aligned Fed Governor To Speed Up Fed Rate Cuts? appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. In recent crypto news, Stephen Miran swore in as the latest Federal Reserve governor on September 16, 2025, slipping into the board’s last open spot right before the Federal Open Market Committee kicks off its two-day rate discussion. Traders are betting heavily on a 25-basis-point trim, which would bring the federal funds rate down to 4.00%-4.25%, based on CME FedWatch Tool figures from September 15, 2025. Miran, who’s been Trump’s top economic advisor and a supporter of his trade ideas, joins a seven-member board where just three governors come from Democratic picks, according to the Fed’s records updated that same day. Crypto News: Miran’s Background and Quick Path to Confirmation The Senate greenlit Miran on September 15, 2025, with a tight 48-47 vote, following his nomination on September 2, 2025, as per a recent crypto news update. His stint runs only until January 31, 2026, stepping in for Adriana D. Kugler, who stepped down in August 2025 for reasons not made public. Miran earned his economics Ph.D. from Harvard and worked at the Treasury back in Trump’s first go-around. Afterward, he moved to Hudson Bay Capital Management as an economist, then looped back to the White House in December 2024 to head the Council of Economic Advisers. There, he helped craft Trump’s “reciprocal tariffs” approach, aimed at fixing trade gaps with China and the EU. He wouldn’t quit his White House gig, which irked Senator Elizabeth Warren at the September 7, 2025, confirmation hearings. That limited time frame means Miran gets to cast a vote straight away at the FOMC session starting September 16, 2025. The full board now features Chair Jerome H. Powell (Trump pick, term ends 2026), Vice Chair Philip N. Jefferson (Biden, to 2036), and folks like Lisa D. Cook (Biden, to 2028) and Michael S. Barr…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 03:14
Ukrainian Drone Strikes Hit Moscow, St. Petersburg And Russia’s Economy

Ukrainian Drone Strikes Hit Moscow, St. Petersburg And Russia’s Economy

The post Ukrainian Drone Strikes Hit Moscow, St. Petersburg And Russia’s Economy appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. In Kyiv, Ukraine, on December 6, 2024, President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Ukraine Oleksandr Syrskyi, and Deputy Minister of Strategic Industries of Ukraine Anna Gvozdiar (L to R) attend the handover of the first batch of long-range Peklo (Hell) missile drones to the Defence Forces on the Day of the Armed Forces of Ukraine. Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky conveys the first batch of advanced Peklo missile drones to the military. During the event, it is reported that there have already been five successful uses. The Peklo missile drone, which has a strike range of 700 km and a speed of 700 km per hour, is launched into serial production. NO USE RUSSIA. NO USE BELARUS. (Photo by Ukrinform/NurPhoto via Getty Images) NurPhoto via Getty Images Kyiv is intensifying its air campaign, aiming not only to destroy Russian oil refineries but also to expose the vulnerabilities of the country’s elites. On September 9, a Ukrainian drone targeted Sochi on the Black Sea, just hours after President Vladimir Putin held meetings there. On September 12, a Ukrainian drone struck Russia’s Leningrad region for the first time, hitting the Primorsk oil terminal near St. Petersburg and forcing a temporary suspension at the country’s largest crude port. The drone threat also shut down St. Petersburg’s Pulkovo Airport. Ukraine’s drone offensive is showing results, intensifying pressure on the Kremlin as strikes deepen Russia’s fuel crisis and accelerate inflation. According to September data from the independent pollster Levada Center, a record 66% of respondents in Russia now say it is time to move toward peace negotiations, while just 27% support continuing military action – the lowest level ever recorded. In June, 58% also cited rising prices as their top concern. While public frustration with the war is rising, elites in…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 06:11