Don't be a retail investor anymore, brothers

If you want to quickly assess whether a token is highly concentrated or if there are suspicious wallet connections, Bubblemaps turns these challenging questions into a 'bubble map': each major holder is a bubble, and the flow of funds is represented by lines, clustering together indicates possible relationships. A glance reveals the distribution and connections clearly. The official positioning is as a 'supply audit tool for tokens and NFTs', aiming to make on-chain data understandable for ordinary investors.

What pain points does it really solve?

Information overload: block explorers provide a running account; Bubblemaps visualizes 'who is related to whom, and who holds how much position' directly, reducing information noise.

Suspicious behavior identification: discovering abnormal patterns such as wallet splitting, team address connections through 'clustering' (for instance, using SHIB's diagrammatic teaching to explain how 'multiple wallets cluster' can be identified).

Lowering the barrier to entry: the consensus in popular articles from exchanges and research platforms is that Bubblemaps 'draws out' complex on-chain relationships, making it easier for entry-level users to conduct due diligence.

Core products and feature stack

Bubble Map visualization: the top 250 positions, transfer relationships, clustering structure, all displayed in one image.

Project library and hot lists: you can directly select common tokens and NFT projects for analysis on the web.

Education and case studies: the official Wiki and ecosystem articles showcase actual cases (such as price impacts after identifying major holder clusters), providing a path for 'discovery → verification'.

The role of BMT token (usage and value proposition)

Mainstream materials position BMT as a utility/governance token within the Bubblemaps ecosystem: used for accessing advanced features, ecosystem incentives, and governance participation; while enhancing data coverage and quality in conjunction with intelligence collaboration (community contribution modules like Intel Desk).

Supply and circulation (key points): multiple market sources indicate the total supply is 1 billion tokens; circulating and market cap data should be based on real-time announcements from various platforms (subject to significant fluctuations, it is recommended to refer to the day's data from exchanges or aggregators).

Differences from traditional on-chain analysis

From 'tables + lists' to 'structured maps': compared to SQL and tables of Dune/traditional browsers, Bubblemaps directly expresses concentration and connections through maps, shortening the decision-making path.

Retail investor friendly: no need to write query statements or build ETL; just click to use; more suitable for 'quick checkups' and 'entry-level due diligence'.

What usage scenarios is it suitable for?

1. Quick screening before the opening: check the concentration and clustering of the top 250 addresses for anomalies;

2. Position risk review: track whether major holders sync withdrawals;

3. Community education/content creation: using intuitive screenshots to explain 'why I say this project is unhealthy'.

Competition and moat

The barrier lies in 'visual experience + topic cases': Bubblemaps forms a brand mindset through a distinctive UI, easy-to-use features, and extensive case dissemination;

Ecosystem spillover: repeatedly introduced by multiple trading/research platforms, facilitating new users to naturally 'walk in'.

What you really care about: Risks and points of attention

Map ≠ Conviction: Clusters and connections suggest 'possible associations', but conclusions should not be drawn solely from one map; cross-validation is necessary (on-chain timeline, source of funds, social media/team disclosures).

Secondary market volatility: BMT price, circulation, unlocking, and trading volume exhibit strong volatility; be sure to rely on the day's authoritative market data and manage positions in conjunction with the unlocking rhythm.

Information bias: different data sources may have varying standards, it is recommended to cross-reference with at least two data sources.

If you need a tool that's easy to use and can visually penetrate the chip structure, Bubblemaps deserves a spot on your due diligence 'first screen'. BMT connects this tool into an ecosystem, taking on the value of access, incentives, and governance.