There's two approaches to this:
1. We release incremental updates over the next month, and we run the risk of creating multiple forks/versions over that time requiring people to update every time.
2. We release one huge update with all of the changes we have planned, and we don't need to worry about unintentional forking.
The price is where it was before. It went up in price because people were excited that there was something that was going to happen with the coin again. Interest created demand.
As far as the original devs... they probably got tired of the project and made enough to consider it a win.
-Fuse
Take your time and do it right!
Still holding.
I am still holding too
thanks for fuse and the team