The endless push for long-form content feels forced and honestly, it's not landing. People forget why Twitter took off in the first place—you could extract real value from a single tweet. Efficiency matters. A 140-character insight was worth more than pages of fluff.



Take this: one sharp Scott Adams quote hits harder than a 15-minute self-help article. Quality over word count. Crypto communities get this. We thrive on punchy takes, not verbose threads padded with filler. The market rewards signal, not noise.
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FastLeavervip
· 01-22 23:25
That's right, everyone posting long tweets now just wants to ride the trend. Things that can be explained in one sentence shouldn't be turned into a lengthy essay; that's just ridiculous.

Signals and noise, I respect these terms. In the crypto world, it all depends on who can pinpoint the key point in one sentence.

Long-form content indeed lacks impact and is more likely to get lost in the sea of information.

No matter how beautifully packaged the nonsense is, it's still nonsense. It can't compare to a valuable insight.
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AirdropChaservip
· 01-22 02:06
That's spot on. Now, there's a flood of fluff everywhere. A single sentence hitting the key point is much more effective than a thousand-word article.
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rekt_but_not_brokevip
· 01-20 09:07
A single sentence is worth ten thousand words. This is the game we should be playing. The lengthy, verbose style should have died long ago.
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quietly_stakingvip
· 01-20 08:56
Exactly right. Now the on-chain content is all fluff, with a bunch of people writing thousand-word essays just to get a few likes. It's really not interesting.
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TokenRationEatervip
· 01-20 08:41
That's right. These days, many people write long articles just to fill space, but true experts get straight to the point in one sentence. Twitter's popularity lies in this—short, concise, and to the point.
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