Kaspa Holders Keep Buying Despite Market Fear

Kaspa Holders Keep Buying Despite Market Fear

Hey, welcome to Kaspa Daily Pulse – here’s what the Kaspa community’s been buzzing about today.

Today had a lot of noise… but underneath it, the main mood was pretty clear: people are still accumulating KAS, even while price action feels heavy.

A bunch of the real conversation centered around buying behavior. Several community members talked about buying weekly, setting limit orders, lowering their average cost, and adding to what one person jokingly called their “doompa fund.” The vibe wasn’t exactly euphoric… more like stubborn conviction. People admitted the market feels rough, and that Kaspa’s price action has been frustrating, but the long-term believers were still saying, “I believe in Kaspa long term.” That was probably the biggest signal of the day.

Is it the bottom? Nobody really knows. And honestly, the community didn’t pretend to know. Some people said it feels like a good price. Others kept low orders open in case of a flash crash. But the shared approach was simple: buy spot, buy weekly, and don’t obsess over every candle.

The second big topic was Kaspa’s tech roadmap, especially DagKnight and vProgs. One post made a pretty bold case that upcoming upgrades could make Kaspa stronger as a scalable, secure, decentralized base layer for finance, Web3, gaming, energy, AI, robotics, transportation, and healthcare. Then someone followed up with a more technical breakdown, saying DagKnight is expected to replace GHOSTDAG, adapt to network latency, and target 100 blocks per second… while vProgs would use off-chain computation with on-chain verification through zero-knowledge proofs. Big vision, big claims… and the community definitely noticed.

Third, there was a more technical concern around emissions, block usage, and security budget. Someone summed it up as: “tick tock, emissions ain’t stopping.” The discussion moved into needing to fill blocks, with one person mentioning that base fees could increase around 10 times after a hardfork. It wasn’t a polished debate, but it showed people are thinking beyond price and asking how the network stays economically secure over time.

And finally… the Discord had scam alerts popping up again and again. Multiple people called out scammers hitting the channel throughout the day. Annoying, yes, but also a reminder that the community is actively watching and policing the space.

That’s it for today’s pulse. Let’s see what tomorrow brings. Catch you then.