The interactions between wallets, team wallets and exchanges, and the migration of liquidity pools are nearly impossible to track comprehensively without tools. The emergence of BMT (Bubblemaps) is to solve this problem. Its core idea is simple: to visualize holdings and fund flows using charts.

After looking at the BMT interface, each 'bubble' represents a wallet address or address cluster, the size of the bubble indicates the amount held, and the lines represent fund flows. This kind of visualization not only allows traders to directly see the behavior of whales but also enables institutions to quickly screen for risks, and helps project parties use transparent data to prove they are not engaging in 'black box operations.'

For individual users, BMT may be a time-saving tool. For example, if you want to confirm the distribution of a certain token, just click to see the relationships and flow of the top twenty wallets. Compared to manually browsing a block explorer, this intuitive display is much more efficient. For institutions, BMT can quickly trigger alerts when large fund migrations or suspicious concentrated transfers occur by integrating with API interfaces and risk control systems.

The role of BMT is also reflected in community education. Many newcomers often do not understand how 'fund flows' affect prices or security, while BMT's graphical presentation lowers the understanding threshold, allowing beginners to grasp fund directions at the first moment.

BMT is not meant to replace judgment. The deduction of on-chain fund flows requires synthesizing information from multiple aspects, such as announcements, audits, and on-chain logs. The role of BMT is more like a microscope, helping you see 'the things that need to be seen,' but how to interpret it still requires integrating other data.

If I may say, the value of BMT lies in reducing information barriers. Tasks that previously required high-level on-chain analysis are now compressed into 'viewing a chart.' In the fast-paced cryptocurrency market, such tools often mean higher efficiency and lower error rates.@Bubblemaps.io #Bubblemaps $BMT