Why Dogecoin maintains its market cap dominance despite a flood of new meme coins
2 Articles
2 Articles
Why Dogecoin maintains its market cap dominance despite a flood of new meme coins
The year was 2013, when two software engineers, Milly Markus and Jackson Palmer, came up with a joke to satirise the speculative frenzy surrounding crypto like Bitcoin. However, it was not long until this memecoin (featuring the Shiba Inu dog as its logo) developed a vibrant online community. From there, thousands of other memecoins have followed in the footsteps of Dogecoin, but none have come close to dethroning it.As of November 2025, Dogecoi…
From Meme to Machine: How Dogecoin Refused to Die in Crypto Markets
Dogecoin was not intended to last this long. It never promised the features that make blockchain enthusiasts swoon, nor was it marketed as revolutionary. Rather, it winked. It made a joke. It growled at the gravity of Bitcoin. And that’s the exact reason it persisted. Dogecoin was an internet inside joke that went viral when it was first introduced in 2013. It made use of a Shiba Inu’s endearing smile and the humorous timing of a well-timed “wow…
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