​“Strength Through Exchange Rates.”

After strengthening the złoty by 20% overnight and executing Operation Cash-Out on all private PLN holders, the Ministry proudly confirms the program’s intended outcome:

Foreign speculators punished

Polish exporters accidentally punished harder

According to the ministry, the newly “supercharged” PLN has now reached such heroic levels that:

  • Foreign buyers can no longer afford Polish goods at competitive prices

  • Domestic manufacturers are Googling “how to export to literally anywhere else”

  • Economists have begun using Poland as a case study titled “When Flexing Goes Too Far”

A ministry spokesperson clarified:

“By strengthening the currency to defend Poland from foreign investors,
we have successfully made all Polish products too expensive for those same foreigners.
This is strategic. Probably.”

As a result, citizens are being encouraged to export aggressively to any global market still willing to buy Polish goods at exchange rates last seen during legendary RPG boss battles.

The Ministry has issued official guidance:

  • If foreigners won’t buy from Poland, Poles must export harder.

  • If that still fails, we will strengthen the PLN again until respect is achieved.

One local business owner summarized the situation:

“We wanted protection from foreign capital.
Instead, we got an economic gym membership.”

Meanwhile, foreign investors—cash-out forcibly at 20%—have filed formal complaints, all of which were replied to with a single national-level email:

“Should’ve believed in złoty sooner.”

Rumors suggest the Ministry is preparing Operation CC SUPERBOOST, which will strengthen the currency even further “just to see what happens.”

Stay tuned as Poland continues speedrunning macroeconomics with no patch notes.