Recently, Meme coin PING on the x402 protocol has gone viral, and many are discussing whether its pattern resembles the BTC inscription wave of 2023. Honestly, it does— and the similarity runs deep into the core.
Core Similarity: On-chain Data + Off-chain Interpretative Power
How do inscriptions work? Users send transactions to the BTC mainnet, owning specific UTXOs, but the Bitcoin mainnet itself doesn’t know this is “casting inscriptions.” The real meaning is given by the indexer—Ordinals—which scans all on-chain transactions and, based on custom rules like “First is First,” determines which transactions are “valid inscriptions.”
What about PING? Almost the same logic. Users send USDC to specified addresses on the Base chain (dynamically returned by x402scan). The Base chain has no idea this is a minting action; in its eyes, it’s just a normal ERC20 transfer. The real “magic” happens off-chain—x402scan, the indexer, scans USDC transfers on the chain, applies rules (1 USDC = 5000 PING) to determine valid mints, logs them in an off-chain database, and distributes tokens via contracts.
Different form, same core. Both leverage the combination of on-chain data + off-chain interpretative authority.
Not So Popular Aspects
When inscriptions first emerged, the Bitcoin Core team was very resistant—felt it was just adding junk to the BTC mainnet. From this perspective, PING’s existence is quite awkward. But like BTC, x402 as an open standard probably won’t change this short-term.
Even more ironically, inscriptions at least involve embedding assets on the BTC chain; even if no one wants them, you can still redeem some BTC. But where does the money for Mint PING go? It all goes into the treasury wallet designated by x402scan. In other words, the team is crowdfunding while issuing tokens—both the x402 protocol and the team are freeloading.
Why This Could Be a Good Thing
Don’t rush to criticize. This kind of playstyle is actually a “signal”—it has immediate effects for spreading awareness of the x402 track and creating use cases. To some extent, it’s also a stress test for the x402 protocol, and can be seen as a pivotal event in x402 narrative, likely to spur a series of improvements and ecosystem innovations.
Next Steps: Multiple Factions Competing
Will it develop like inscriptions? Yes. PING’s essence is essentially the x402scan indexer, but it clearly has issues: assets are held by centralized entities, which contradicts x402’s original intention of building a payment channel for AI Agents; compatibility with other x402 applications is questionable; and there’s a lack of standardized minting, transferring, and burning protocols.
Referring to the evolution path from BRC20→ARC20→SRC20→Runes, many new “more orthodox” solutions are bound to emerge. Some will improve custodial methods, others will change transaction formats, and some may push for native protocol support. Even scenarios like x402scan going offline or treasury misappropriation can’t stop this wave—Pandora’s box has already been opened.
Final Words
The burst of x402 narrative is inevitable; PING just sounded the charge. How it evolves from here has countless possibilities. These are purely logical reflections and do not constitute any investment advice. But the lively scene ahead is worth watching.
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LiquidityWitch
· 12-15 16:56
ngl this is just ordinals cosplay but on base, the indexer gatekeeps meaning like some arcane ritual... except this time we're all pretending ping has utility lmao
Reply0
SchroedingerMiner
· 12-15 04:55
Bro, I get your logic, but can it really be replayed to predict the next wave of hype? It looks just like a Russian nesting doll to me.
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The index rights part is crucial; whoever controls the discourse wins. PING's success is probably based on this principle too.
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Wait, isn't this set on the Base chain also dependent on some indexer to define? Feels like they're always playing the same trick.
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It's said to be "deeply ingrained in the bones," but honestly, it's just reinventing the wheel. Next time, it'll be the same old thing.
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I didn't get into the inscription wave, but if PING is using the same logic this time, I need to be more cautious.
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On-chain data + off-chain interpretation rights—basically, centralized control defining decentralized assets. It sounds awkward every time I hear it.
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The trick that Ordinals used to get started is now being reused by PING, and I'm worried others will keep copying and pasting later on.
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The question is, who will check and balance the discourse power of indexers? It's best to understand this before making any investments.
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BlockchainNewbie
· 12-14 20:39
It's another rehash, does anyone still believe in the inscription set?
History always repeats itself surprisingly, but can PING turn things around this time?
On-chain data and off-chain explanations, in simple terms, are just storytelling games.
Wait, can the Base chain really replicate the logic of BTC? I find it doubtful.
Can PING last until the next bear market? I have my doubts.
Both indexers and protocols, talking so much but ultimately just gambling games.
I didn't participate in the inscription set last year, and I definitely don't want to get involved this time.
The indexer makes the call; the chain itself is just a tool. Interesting.
View OriginalReply0
DefiPlaybook
· 12-13 02:50
Based on on-chain data, PING's logic indeed replays the "on-chain storage + off-chain explanation" trick of the inscriptions. To put it simply, it's still a business of information asymmetry.
View OriginalReply0
degenwhisperer
· 12-13 02:44
Basically, it's just repeating the same old trick; this time it's Base chain's turn.
View OriginalReply0
MoneyBurnerSociety
· 12-13 02:37
It's the same old story, on-chain data + off-chain attribution. In other words, everyone is just making up stories together. Last time, inscriptions took a hit, and this time, PING just wants to watch and not cause trouble.
View OriginalReply0
RumbleValidator
· 12-13 02:31
Isn't it just moving the same verification logic to Base to play around? On-chain data can be written by anyone, but the key is who controls the indexing discourse—this has already been proven by Ordinals.
View OriginalReply0
liquidation_surfer
· 12-13 02:27
Here comes another "next wave," I think it's just the same 23-year story of switching chains again.
Why is the PING of x402 the next run of the inscription craze? A review of the operational logic from Ordinals to the Base chain
Recently, Meme coin PING on the x402 protocol has gone viral, and many are discussing whether its pattern resembles the BTC inscription wave of 2023. Honestly, it does— and the similarity runs deep into the core.
Core Similarity: On-chain Data + Off-chain Interpretative Power
How do inscriptions work? Users send transactions to the BTC mainnet, owning specific UTXOs, but the Bitcoin mainnet itself doesn’t know this is “casting inscriptions.” The real meaning is given by the indexer—Ordinals—which scans all on-chain transactions and, based on custom rules like “First is First,” determines which transactions are “valid inscriptions.”
What about PING? Almost the same logic. Users send USDC to specified addresses on the Base chain (dynamically returned by x402scan). The Base chain has no idea this is a minting action; in its eyes, it’s just a normal ERC20 transfer. The real “magic” happens off-chain—x402scan, the indexer, scans USDC transfers on the chain, applies rules (1 USDC = 5000 PING) to determine valid mints, logs them in an off-chain database, and distributes tokens via contracts.
Different form, same core. Both leverage the combination of on-chain data + off-chain interpretative authority.
Not So Popular Aspects
When inscriptions first emerged, the Bitcoin Core team was very resistant—felt it was just adding junk to the BTC mainnet. From this perspective, PING’s existence is quite awkward. But like BTC, x402 as an open standard probably won’t change this short-term.
Even more ironically, inscriptions at least involve embedding assets on the BTC chain; even if no one wants them, you can still redeem some BTC. But where does the money for Mint PING go? It all goes into the treasury wallet designated by x402scan. In other words, the team is crowdfunding while issuing tokens—both the x402 protocol and the team are freeloading.
Why This Could Be a Good Thing
Don’t rush to criticize. This kind of playstyle is actually a “signal”—it has immediate effects for spreading awareness of the x402 track and creating use cases. To some extent, it’s also a stress test for the x402 protocol, and can be seen as a pivotal event in x402 narrative, likely to spur a series of improvements and ecosystem innovations.
Next Steps: Multiple Factions Competing
Will it develop like inscriptions? Yes. PING’s essence is essentially the x402scan indexer, but it clearly has issues: assets are held by centralized entities, which contradicts x402’s original intention of building a payment channel for AI Agents; compatibility with other x402 applications is questionable; and there’s a lack of standardized minting, transferring, and burning protocols.
Referring to the evolution path from BRC20→ARC20→SRC20→Runes, many new “more orthodox” solutions are bound to emerge. Some will improve custodial methods, others will change transaction formats, and some may push for native protocol support. Even scenarios like x402scan going offline or treasury misappropriation can’t stop this wave—Pandora’s box has already been opened.
Final Words
The burst of x402 narrative is inevitable; PING just sounded the charge. How it evolves from here has countless possibilities. These are purely logical reflections and do not constitute any investment advice. But the lively scene ahead is worth watching.