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[KR KOL Index] Apr 22 | Top Trending Topics on Global & KR Timelines

BTC $750k–$1.25M within five years gained attention on the back of institutional adoption narratives, alongside viral symbolic stories like the alleged “107 BTC burn.” At the same time, risk chatter spread around falling exchange volumes, potential rug-pull/insider-dump cases, changing CME gap dynamics with a 24/7 shift, and alt/theme rotation plus event-driven campaigns.

[KR KOL Index] Apr 22 | Top Trending Topics on Global & KR Timelines

As the sentiment of “starting to look at Bitcoin again” resurfaced, a forecast that Bitcoin could reach $750,000–$1,250,000 within the next five years drew community attention. While institutional adoption was cited as the primary rationale for the ultra-bullish view, debates over the authenticity of narrative-driven issues symbolized by the “107 BTC burn,” rug-pull allegations tied to sharp token crashes, and warning signs such as cooling trading volume also spread in parallel.

“$750k–$1.25M within 5 years” — bullish thesis spreads on institutional adoption

Posts circulated rapidly—especially across overseas channels—claiming Ark Invest’s Cathie Wood projected “Bitcoin at $750,000–$1,250,000 within five years.” The posts directly pointed to “institutional adoption” as the key driver, emphasizing optimism from a long-cycle perspective. Meanwhile, Korean channels also showed recurring reactions such as “I keep buying small amounts even on dips” and “I’ll treat this as an accumulation opportunity,” suggesting that long-term holding narratives continue to be consumed despite short-term volatility.

‘107 BTC burn’ story goes viral, followed by rebuttals citing “thin evidence” and “signs of selling”

In Korean communities, a “burn incident” narrative became a hot topic, alleging that 107 BTC from a dormant wallet dating back 11–12 years was moved to a burn address. The story claimed developers who met on IRC kept a promise to “burn instead of selling.” Soon after, pushback emerged—“the evidence is insufficient” and “there are traces of transfers to exchanges suggesting a sale”—escalating into a broader debate over authenticity. Rather than reaching a definitive conclusion, users showed a consumption pattern focused on screenshots and curated summaries to re-check the facts.

Rug-pull suspicions and crash cases highlighted — on-the-ground reporting on ‘ESPORTS’ also shared

Risk awareness around abrupt collapses rose simultaneously. Summaries spread that a gaming/e-sports coin, ‘ESPORTS,’ plunged by more than 90% in a single day, alongside claims of large-scale selling on-chain (a significant share versus circulating supply) and a Korean media report describing a visit to the developer’s office. Even with caveats like “it’s not confirmed whether this was insider selling or market-maker inventory,” community reactions remained highly sensitive to suspicion-driven narratives.

Slowing volumes and weakening correlations discussed — CME’s 24/7 shift puts ‘gap’ indicators in focus

On the data side, the phrase “spot volume across the top 10 exchanges down 50%” spread widely, reinforcing concerns about weakening liquidity. Another shared claim was that “Bitcoin’s correlation with global liquidity is at a 10-year low,” prompting interpretations that even with M2 expansion, capital inflows into crypto may be limited. At the same time, as CME crypto futures/options move to 24-hour trading starting May 29, 2026, posts explaining that the ‘CME gap’ metric will become harder to form—and listing the remaining upside/downside gap zones—attracted strong interest.

Altcoin ‘stock theme’ crowding felt, with steady consumption of event-driven info (campaigns/AMA/TGE)

Some users noted that Binance’s listing momentum appears centered on “stock (equity) themes.” This led to takes such as “excluding Bitcoin, it feels like alt season is here,” suggesting a narrative rotation toward a single sector. Meanwhile, practical community information—project campaigns (video-review events), a ZK-based project AMA announcement, experiences of sharp exchange-only dumps (price dislocations), and schedules like the Dropee TGE—continued to be widely consumed. Many posts also highlighted technology/metrics such as AI, on-chain memory, payments/settlement traction, and TVL growth, reflecting a market where “issues + information + events” are intertwined.

Overall, top community topics paired expectation-boosting messages like the ultra-bullish forecast with caution signals such as burn-story authenticity disputes, rug-pull suspicions, and volume slowdowns. The dominant response pattern favored cross-checking institutional adoption narratives, on-chain context, and indicators like volume/gaps, while also monitoring event- and reporting-driven risks. This article was produced using Telegram messages collected via DataMaxiPlus community analysis technology.