I don't like anything related to Rare Satoshis or Ordinals and consider it all spam on the network. A type of spam that caused the transaction fees to shoot up to $100 dollars for regular use. Luckily, it's a thing of the past. The trend is fading, and rightly so. I am sure many were tricked into investing money in this nonsense, expecting massive returns, which never came. Hopefully, we won't see spam like that any time soon.
I'm with you hoping, but I'm not expecting such foolery to die, not soon, not ever. Lest we forget, we are humans. As such, we are crazy. We always find something rare in the most banal of things. There's always a rare Sat, a rare merit, a rare coin, a rare meat, hair, stone, pencil, parrot, salt, saliva, and a googolplex of other otherwise ordinary stuff.
The first Sat mined after the last halving was speculated to reach a value of $1 million. To somebody who doesn't like this craziness, what if that "epic Sat" belonged to you and somebody offered to buy it for $1 million, would you decline?
I would take advantage of the opportunity and sell it if I had it in my wallet, but I would not indulge myself in such craziness. Bitcoin sats are labeled all the same until ordinals are created. I am neutral on this and I felt that this kind of thing (rare satoshis belief) will exist as long as there are people who are into this kind of thing.
I don't like anything related to Rare Satoshis or Ordinals and consider it all spam on the network. A type of spam that caused the transaction fees to shoot up to $100 dollars for regular use. Luckily, it's a thing of the past. The trend is fading, and rightly so. I am sure many were tricked into investing money in this nonsense, expecting massive returns, which never came. Hopefully, we won't see spam like that any time soon.
I wonder if the developer closes "the portal" of L2 ordinals or denies its access to the L1 layer of Bitcoin would this kind of craziness stop?