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Trent.sol、Synergyの「slopchain」を嘲笑 — バイラルなスレッドでの781 quintillion TPSという途方もない主張を切り捨てる

Trent.sol、Synergyの「slopchain」を嘲笑 — バイラルなスレッドでの781 quintillion TPSという途方もない主張を切り捨てる

In the fast-paced world of blockchain and meme tokens, hype can sometimes spiral into the absurd. That's exactly what happened when Synergy Solutions LLC dropped a bombshell claim about their project's transaction speeds. But Solana's own Trent.sol wasn't having any of it, dubbing it a "slopchain" in a thread that's got the crypto community buzzing.

The Wild Claim That Started It All

It all kicked off with a post from @Synergycorpp, where they announced not just hitting 23 billion transactions per second (TPS)—a metric that measures how many transactions a blockchain can handle in a second—but obliterating it by achieving a mind-boggling 781 quintillion TPS. For context, Solana, one of the fastest blockchains out there, boasts around 65,000 TPS in theory, though real-world figures are lower. This claim isn't just ambitious; it's straight out of science fiction.

They backed it up with a slick terminal screenshot showing "quantum breaches" and "temporal fold cascades," complete with stats like 3,159 validator nodes and 460 "consciousness shards." It sounds more like a plot from a cyberpunk novel than a serious tech demo.

Synergyが端末インターフェースで誇張したTPS主張のスクリーンショット

The post tagged big names in the Solana ecosystem, including Anatoly Yakovenko (@aeyakovenko), the co-founder of Solana, signaling they were aiming for attention from the pros.

Trent.sol Enters the Chat

Trent.sol, a key figure at Anza (a Solana-focused dev firm) and former Solana Labs operative, quote-tweeted the claim with a simple: "new slopchain just dropped." "Slopchain" here is likely a jab at low-effort, hype-driven projects—think "slop" as in sloppy or AI-generated nonsense flooding the crypto space.

But he didn't stop there. In a follow-up quote tweet, Trent tore into the numbers: "like... these claims are many orders of magnitude off the most absurd interpretation of 'transaction' with host instruction bits per second. someone get scp foundation on the phone."

For the uninitiated, the SCP Foundation is a fictional organization from online horror stories that contains anomalous objects and phenomena. Trent's implying these TPS numbers are so impossible, they need to be locked away like a supernatural threat.

Community Reactions and Reality Checks

The thread sparked quick replies that added fuel to the fire. One user pointed out the bandwidth absurdity: achieving 781 quintillion TPS would require about 620 exabits per second—way more than the entire global internet's capacity. That's like trying to stream every movie ever made simultaneously to every person on Earth... and then some.

Another commenter joked about waiting for their "pumpfun coin," referencing Pump.fun, a popular Solana platform for launching meme tokens. Trent replied, "stopping at one would be a huge surprise," hinting that projects like this often spam multiple tokens to cash in on hype.

Even more laughs came from a reply mocking the sci-fi jargon: "oh boy I love some good ‘ol fashioned fibonacci convergence through fractal harmonic resonance."

Why This Matters for Meme Tokens

In the meme token world, where projects like $LOCK (mentioned in Synergy's bio) thrive on viral marketing and community frenzy, exaggerated claims are par for the course. But threads like Trent's serve as a reality check, reminding us to separate genuine innovation from pure hype. Solana's ecosystem is ripe for memes, but sustainability comes from real tech, not quantum fairy tales.

If you're diving into meme tokens, always DYOR (do your own research). Claims of post-singularity tech might sound cool, but in blockchain, speed is limited by physics, not just code.

What do you think—is this just harmless fun, or a sign of overhype in crypto? Check out the full thread here and join the conversation.

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