peppy
@peppy
“Farcaster: The Web3 Town Hall That Accidentally Turned Into a Boomer Family Text Thread” By: A Concerned Zoomer with a Fast Internet Connection and 3,000 Memes in Draft
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peppy
@peppy
In the early days of Web3, Farcaster emerged as a shimmering promise of decentralized social media, a place where developers, degens, and digitally native nomads could congregate outside the corporate overlords of Meta and Twitter (or “X,” if you still pretend Elon’s rebranding wasn’t just a late-stage crypto divorce spiral). With its open protocol and high-minded ideals, Farcaster seemed poised to become the watering hole for the next internet generation. And then… boomers happened.
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peppy
@peppy
No, not literal boomers (though there are rumors of a few LARPing as “crypto-native” while still trying to figure out how to force-quit Microsoft Word). We’re talking spiritual boomers: those users — often under 40! — who somehow emit the digital vibe of your uncle Gary texting a blurry BBQ photo to the family group chat with the caption, “nice day.” Let’s dive into how this tech-forward utopia became an accidental scrapbook for broke tech dads posting pixelated sunset photos and commenting “solid cast” like it’s 2012 and they just discovered Instagram.
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peppy
@peppy
Part 1: “Did You Eat Yet?” – The Boomer Energy of Farcaster Farcaster was meant to be the playground of developers and thinkers — a cerebral Twitter alternative where ideas about decentralization, privacy, and new forms of community could flourish. Instead, it’s become the digital equivalent of your Aunt Cheryl’s 40-minute voice note about how Costco is out of rotisserie chickens again. Let’s take a walk through the app: A guy named “ethdad420” just posted his fourth picture of an empty coffee cup with the caption, “grind time.” Someone else posted a low-res picture of their feet on a patio with a comment thread that just says “vibes.” The top trending cast? “Just had a great sandwich. #BLT #blessed” You begin to wonder: Am I in a high-tech blockchain community or did I accidentally join a Facebook group for suburban hobby photographers named Mike?
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