Author

Topic: Will Litecoin surpass Bitcoin? (Read 97 times)

jr. member
Activity: 202
Merit: 1
August 01, 2018, 01:17:29 AM
#5
if the matter goes beyond bitcoin or not. I also still do not know about it. but certainly not easy to replace bitcoin position with other coin. if it can definitely take a long time and a long process .
jr. member
Activity: 280
Merit: 1
August 01, 2018, 01:14:57 AM
#4
litecoin has been accepted as a medium of payment transactions, I think that's very good news, but it's too early to say that Litecoin will beat Bitcoin, I think Litecoin takes a lot of time to do that, I think Litecoin has a chance to beat Ethereum and Ripple.
member
Activity: 756
Merit: 16
We All Can Make It
August 01, 2018, 01:04:21 AM
#3
Just because of increase in the use of litecoin, you have such a wild imagination. Litecoin is not created with the intention to even compete with bitcoin, it is more like a watered down version of the original i.e. bitcoin.
There is no signal pointing to a Yes here so the answer is No.
sr. member
Activity: 490
Merit: 255
July 31, 2018, 03:39:11 PM
#2
There is no way that a coin like litecoin will end up surpassing the best coin in the market. Even the creator of litecoin has gotten out of his own project, what does that tell you about the coin? Litecoin is a good coin with a lot of potential but there is no way that it will ever level up to bitcoin, there are a few coins that stand the chance and litecoin is not one of them.
newbie
Activity: 73
Merit: 0
July 29, 2018, 07:35:20 PM
#1
Litecoin is becoming an alternative for Bitcoin, as it increasingly serves as a transaction medium for many businesses. The Litecoin Foundation has succeeded in convincing various high-level merchants to accept LTC as a payment method.

The development of Flexa can further accelerate this. Flexa is a one-tap payment method for execution of microtransactions, so users won't have to route payments through banks or card providers. It has good security features and thus users won't have to worry about protecting their private keys.

Do you think so?
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