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So I've been thinking about how wild it is that Matt Furie basically accidentally created one of crypto's most interesting cultural touchstones. Like, the guy just drew a chill frog in his comic strip 'Boy's Club' meant to express that "feels good man" vibe, and somehow it became this massive internet phenomenon.
The thing about Matt Furie's creation is that Pepe was originally just relatable - pure internet comfort, you know? But here's where it gets complicated. Because Pepe's form was so flexible, people started remixing it into basically everything. Some of those remixes went to dark places, and Furie had to publicly distance himself from what his character had become. That's gotta be rough for any artist.
Then crypto happened. In 2016, PEPE emerged as one of the early meme coins on Ethereum, capitalizing on all that internet fame. People saw an opportunity to tokenize internet culture, and suddenly Matt Furie's frog was part of the blockchain narrative. Other tokens followed - SPIKE, WAT, all inspired by Furie's other work. The meme coin space basically became an extension of his creative universe, whether he intended it or not.
What's interesting is watching Matt Furie navigate this whole situation. He's caught between recognizing that his art resonated with people and worrying about the speculative risks and outright scams that come with crypto. He's actively trying to maintain control over Pepe's image, making sure it reflects his original artistic vision rather than becoming another pump-and-dump vehicle.
The reality is that meme coins are still volatile as hell. Some perform surprisingly well, others disappear. Whether Matt Furie-inspired tokens have real staying power in the crypto ecosystem is still an open question. But what's undeniable is that his work has permanently shaped internet culture and, by extension, how crypto communities think about cultural assets and community-driven projects. That's a pretty significant legacy, even if it came with complications he never anticipated.