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Aureus

@aureuscan

Quant Mind in the Trenchers. Survive, Adapt, Repeat | $BTC

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linkhttps://t.me/Aureus_Scan calendar_today05-12-2025 08:47:54

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Everyone understands the feeling. You expect something good… and get the wrong thing instead. That’s why $ALAN 艾伦·昆s reaction hits so hard. 9hhSJm55PzCQ6D5dTTpUwg6LYU2cSfkXgoQYMdkjpump

Everyone understands the feeling. You expect something good…

and get the wrong thing instead.

That’s why $ALAN 艾伦·昆s reaction hits so hard.

9hhSJm55PzCQ6D5dTTpUwg6LYU2cSfkXgoQYMdkjpump
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Big respect to the $BEDROCK creator for backing $DIAMOND like this! Strong support + clear incentives up to $1M on the chart is huge. This is the kind of alignment the community loves to see. $DIAMOND hands only. Let’s see how far this can go.

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Pixel art that nails the classic blocky slime drop the one every gamer remembers crafting sticky stuff with. 🟩 Pure nostalgic gaming meme energy on Solana. No politics, no deep narra just vibes and nostalgia. Send $Slimeball

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The viral moment comes from a part of the lyrics where the singer repeatedly says “那个 (nei ge)”. It simply means “that” in Mandarin. Because of the pronunciation, many non-Chinese listeners thought it sounded like the N-word. That's why the clip spread widely online. The

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It even became a common prank online. Streamers often get this song sent through media share during livestreams. One of the most famous examples is IShowSpeed, who got trolled with it because he thought the singer was saying the N word. youtube.com/watch?v=SS_XY4…

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The story even came full circle when IShowSpeed eventually met the original singer of the song, Da Zhang Wei. The moment went viral and fans found it hilarious after the long running prank history around the song. sportskeeda.com/us/streamers/n…

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This meme is truly viral. Time to frontrun this nigg. repeat after me: nei ge nei ~ nei ge nei nei nei ge nei ge nei nei

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41M views on YouTube. This iconic clip might be going viral again. The “nei ge” part has been circulating online for years and the internet never seems to get tired of it. Time to frontrun this narra.

41M views on YouTube. This iconic clip might be going viral again.

The “nei ge” part has been circulating online for years and the internet never seems to get tired of it.

Time to frontrun this narra.
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“Nei ge” is just a common Mandarin filler word, similar to saying “um”. But this is how many non-Chinese listeners heard it: Nei ge = N* (u know what it is) That misunderstanding is exactly what made the clip spread everywhere online.