Bitcoin was designed to be a "peer-to-peer electronic cash system." When I read the white paper, I envisioned a better form of money for mankind, as we transition into the information age. BTC has given up on that vision in favor of a sort of "digital gold" designed to be held and not spent. That is not something I'm interested in. BCH is a return to the original vision for Bitcoin.
Wait... bitcoin was modeled after the gold mining scheme, in a much steeper -and practically finite and very scarce- way, by design, and you thought what exactly? That it would be inflationary money that encourages spending and fast dumping?
If Satoshi wanted bitcoin to have no serious store of value, to promote quick-dumping instead of holding, he could have made a dogecoin-like scheme, with billions of coins and infinite inflation. But he didn't.
It's very unlikely that you realized this ...after BCH was created. Everyone knew what BTC is (scarce, limited, promotes hoarding instead of spending) for years. But you were interested then and lost interest after BCH? Lol...
However, even if you misunderstood what Bitcoin is, there are plenty of altcoins with problematic store of value properties, including bitcoin forks that will run into a tail emission requirement (since it won't be able to support itself with fees), that can suit your "needs" of a devaluating coin.