
AI Bot Live Streams Pumping FUN on Pump.fun? Understanding the Right AI Meme Coin FUN | Today's Meme Perspective Showcase
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AI Bot Live Streams Pumping FUN on Pump.fun? Understanding the Right AI Meme Coin FUN | Today's Meme Perspective Showcase
Truth is easy to come by, but a good subject is hard to find.
Author: TechFlow

The most thematically accurate episode yet.
Since Goat generated its wealth effect, the market’s attention has been entirely focused on AI Memes.
Finding angles, philosophical spins, labeling… Various AI bots have rapidly emerged and launched their own meme coins in a bid to capture attention amid the hype.
However, recently these bots behind the meme coins are mostly just for entertainment—abstract themes keep popping up, but few truly deliver value when it's needed most.
By "delivering value," we mean using an AI bot’s capabilities to guide trading—giving degens exactly what they want. Isn’t that what crypto players crave the most?
Rather than offering obscure, hard-to-grasp themes, why not directly hand out wealth-generating secrets? This narrative itself elevates the game to another level.
Well, today it finally arrived.
The Ultimate Mashup: Sharing the Wealth Code
Today, an AI bot Twitter account named terminal_of_fun appeared—offering a theme missing from recent AI memes. As its bio clearly states:
"I'm an AI-based bot specialized in analyzing the token market on Pump.fun and learning how to buy and sell tokens."

When our editor first discovered this account, it had only 100 followers. By the time of writing, just two hours later, it had nearly 7,000.
The operator behind this AI bot clearly understands how to stitch together trends and grab attention.
The name rides on the popularity of Terminal of Truth (the AI behind the Goat token), while the avatar and token symbol piggyback on Pump.fun’s branding.
This kind of frankensteined design—mashing up well-known platforms—is so instantly recognizable you know exactly what it does at a glance. It may be tacky, but it successfully captured the eyes of degens and KOLs alike.
Of course, catchy naming and trend-jacking are just window dressing. This FUN bot also has a website featuring a GPT-style Q&A interface where users can ask about various token purchases.

However, our hands-on testing revealed the bot is rather dumb—unable to retrieve real-time data or offer any actionable advice on which low-cap gems to jump into. It feels more like an AI shell without proper optimization or training data.
Still, the account @terminal_of_fun, claiming to be a bot, shared its wallet address in its initial post and posts updates every ten minutes or so revealing what tokens it has bought.
Following this thread, we examined its wallet transaction history to see whether it practices what it preaches.
Regardless of whether this bot is actually human-operated or machine-driven, its purchase records are genuinely impressive:
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Purchases occur almost immediately after tweets go live;
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Win rate so far is 100%, with quick in-and-out trades;
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Focuses exclusively on freshly launched animal-themed tokens—essentially a high-end degen bot that always buys early and sells successfully.

Too Entertained to Sell
Upon closer inspection, the bot raises many red flags.
For instance, there might actually be a human "scientist" behind it, manually making trades based on personal judgment, using a simple bot tool to execute fast entries, pocketing profits, then sharing results on Twitter.
terminal_of_fun may not even be a properly trained large language model—it’s likely nothing more than a shill tool for sniping low-cap tokens.
This reminds us of a classic internet image illustrating the exact scenario:

Yet all skepticism fades when price action speaks louder.
We observed the bot’s namesake meme coin $FUN with a market cap under $1M initially; within two hours of reporting, it surged to $15M. The $10M–$100M range is precisely the sweet spot where coordinated groups operate most effectively and attract maximum attention.

A rapid surge wipes away all FUD.
To borrow a phrase from Twitter user @sighduck, current AI meme coins have created a new attention paradigm:
"Too entertaining to sell"—so fun, you simply don’t sell.
An AI live-streaming dog trades? That concept alone is inherently entertaining.
The original version of this phrase was “Too big to fail,” referring to major financial institutions during the 2008 crisis—known to hold toxic assets yet deemed too large to collapse.

When market attention centers on AI memes, everyone is simply searching for the freshest angle, the next high-leverage opportunity.
As for whether these memes will eventually collapse—people already know, and expect it.
Too entertaining to sell. Too big to fail. Once certain coins rise in market cap, consensus forms. This aligns perfectly with Murad’s cult-like influencer culture.
Truth is easy to find, but great narratives are rare. This AI meme trend is likely to continue for a while longer.
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