
Markets3 min read
South Korea's Crypto Boom Is Fading
Crypto trading activity in South Korea has fallen sharply relative to the country's stock market, underscoring how quickly sentiment can shift in one of Asia's most active retail trading hubs
Dogecoin started as a deliberate joke in December 2013, built in a matter of hours by two software engineers who wanted to mock the growing seriousness of the crypto market. T welve years lat

Dogecoin started as a deliberate joke in December 2013, built in a matter of hours by two software engineers who wanted to mock the growing seriousness of the crypto market. T
welve years later, DOGE sits at approximately $15.63 billion in market capitalisation, ranks #9 globally, carries a circulating supply of around 154 billion DOGE, and trades with daily volume exceeding $3 billion. That path from satire to top-ten asset is one of the stranger stories in financial history.
Dogecoin was created as a joke in late 2013 by Billy Markus, a software engineer then at IBM, and Jackson Palmer, a product manager at Adobe. Both thought cryptocurrency was being taken far too seriously.
Palmer created the Dogecoin(.)com website and would serve as its public face, while Markus worked as the solo developer on the first four releases. On December 6, 2013, the coin launched, taking its identity from the famous Doge meme: an image of a Shiba Inu dog named Kabosu, with multicoloured Comic Sans text appearing as the dog's thought bubbles.
Before the launch, Palmer had absentmindedly tweeted, "Investing in Dogecoin, pretty sure it's the next big thing." Much to his surprise, people encouraged him to pursue the idea, and a week later, he bought the domain Dogecoin.com. He then reached out to Markus, and together they built the coin. Within the first 30 days, Dogecoin(.)com received over a million visitors, and the coin's market value reached $8 million.
Dogecoin is not built from scratch. It is a fork of Luckycoin, which itself was forked from Litecoin, and it uses the Scrypt hashing algorithm under a Proof-of-Work consensus mechanism. This gives it a one-minute block time, roughly ten times faster than Bitcoin's ten-minute interval, and keeps transaction fees low by design.
This is where Dogecoin differs most sharply from Bitcoin. Key technical details include:
The inflationary supply design was intentional. The fixed annual issuance is meant to replace lost coins and keep fees low, making DOGE function more like a spendable currency than a fixed-supply store of value.
One of the most overlooked parts of Dogecoin's story is how early its community proved itself with real action. The community raised $30,000 in DOGE to send the Jamaican bobsled team to the 2014 Winter Olympics and another $30,000 to fund clean water wells in Kenya through the Doge4Water campaign. These were not marketing campaigns. They happened organically, driven by Reddit users who had adopted the coin's "Do Only Good Everyday" ethos.
Dogecoin became the second-most-tipped currency just a week after its launch. The practice of sending small amounts of DOGE to reward good posts and helpful comments gave the coin real, everyday utility long before most other cryptocurrencies had any practical use at all.
Starting around 2020, Elon Musk began tweeting about Dogecoin repeatedly, calling it his favourite cryptocurrency. On May 8, 2021, DOGE hit its all-time high of $0.7376, briefly making it the fourth-largest cryptocurrency by market capitalisation. Importantly, that peak came in the hours building up to Musk's appearance on Saturday Night Live that same evening. The price actually fell sharply during and after the broadcast, as many traders sold on the news. The ATH was driven by anticipation, not by the show itself.
Musk's influence also extended to naming his government efficiency initiative "DOGE," which, while entirely unrelated to the coin, kept Dogecoin's name in mainstream news cycles throughout 2025 and into 2026. That naming overlap changed nothing about Dogecoin's blockchain mechanics or tokenomics.
As of May 26, 2026, DOGE is trading at approximately $0.10, with a market cap of around $15.62 billion, ranking #9 by global market capitalization. Analysts are watching the 200-day EMA at $0.1260 as the immediate ceiling, a level that has rejected the price three times already this year. Support is holding around the $0.10 floor that the coin broke above in early May.
The Dogecoin Foundation, rebooted in August 2021 to provide legal structure and technical stewardship, counts Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin and Jared Birchall, the manager of Elon Musk's family office, on its advisory board. The current development roadmap focuses on merchant tooling, payment infrastructure, and developer libraries.
Dogecoin is a Scrypt-based, Proof-of-Work cryptocurrency with one-minute block times, a fixed 10,000 DOGE block reward, no supply cap, and merge-mining security through Litecoin's network since August 2014. It launched in December 2013 as a parody, built a real community through tipping and charitable fundraising, peaked at $0.7376 in May 2021, and now trades around $0.10 at a market cap placing it at #9 globally. The on-chain data and market position are real, whatever one makes of its origins.