Skepticism and criticism are understandable among investors but we must try to remain patient and let this roll out without sabotaging our own investment. The burden of proof Of course is on the HEAT team. They will need to do a lot to bring more value to this project.
Although I remain vigilant and cautious, I still did not lose hope that this will turn out well at the end.
So we need to stay silent to lure new investors into this? So we can sell, when new dumbfucks arrive? Yeah, worked well for Bernie Madoff!
I don't think people should stay silent as a general principle, and I never said that criticism is bad, but screaming scam scam scam is not necessarily that smart as well. I am not even talking about your own funds, I am talking about the very fact that you do not have any definitive proof that this is in fact a scam (even if you really feel it to be so) and screaming it does not make it a fact. The minimum you and anyone else can do is wait for the release which is gonna happen very very soon. But you know what? some people actually have perhaps an agenda to scream scam so they can pick up dirt cheap, or just enjoy the trolling they cause.
On another note, I believe that for the sake of community trust, fairness, and in order to show everyone that this is not just an attempt to get another funding round going, the share sale should be postponed for after the heat team manages to bring actual real value to the coin. This should be achieved by materializing and bringing the cutting edge tech they committed to provide and managing to get the coin listed and traded in serious outlets. If this happens and the project can get wider traction, the actual step of share sale will be much more successful and accepted both by outsiders and initial investors alike. The current offered discount in share price should be offered for holders in the future when this stage is initiated.
Heat needs proof of tech and dev work, subsequently, vast improvement in publicity and community reach (interviews, articles, videos, and more), and of course the ability to be traded in common market outlets.