In the crazy Meme coin market, is the token allocation fair? Are the project parties hiding "whale wallets" waiting to dump? Bubblemaps is becoming the traders' "fraud detection radar."
1. See through token allocation to avoid traps
Meme coins often tout "community-driven" as a gimmick, but Bubblemaps can visualize the holding distribution with one click. If the top 10 wallets control 80% of the supply, this could be a signal of a scam. For example, a popular Meme coin was found to have 60% of tokens concentrated in 3 associated wallets, and the price subsequently plummeted by 90%.
2. Crowdsourced investigation, community co-governance
Through the Intel Desk feature, users can report suspicious wallet associations (such as project party's masquerade addresses) and earn rewards of $BMT . This "public detective" model leaves no room for black box operations.
3. Decentralized gatekeepers
Bubblemaps' data architecture is open and transparent, and even the on-chain history of whales can be traced. If a project claims to be "fully decentralized" but is afraid to publicly analyze Bubblemaps, it is worth being cautious.
Conclusion: In the speculative bubble, Bubblemaps is not a "wealth-building tool," but a necessity for survival—after all, preserving the principal is the key to laughing last. #Bubblemaps $BMT @Bubblemaps.io