Is on-chain analysis really just for the 'big shots'? Bubblemaps aims to let beginners also be 'on-chain detectives'—no coding knowledge required, just look at the bubble chart to extract key information.
It breaks down complex data into 'plain language': blue bubbles indicate 'exchanges', red bubbles mark 'whales', and green bubbles represent 'retail investors', making it easy for beginners to distinguish between roles at a glance. Want to check if a certain NFT project is popular? Just see which addresses are connected to the 'creator wallet' bubble—if it's closely linked to 'Beeple wallet' or 'Async Art collector wallet', it indicates real interest in the community; if there are only unmarked new bubbles moving around, it could be 'volume manipulation'.
The 'smart interpretation' feature is even more considerate: click on an abnormal bubble, and it will automatically provide an analysis—'this wallet received 100,000 tokens from the project wallet 3 days ago and is now transferring to the exchange' or 'this group of small bubbles has a transfer time difference of less than 1 second, suspected to be controlled by the same person'. Holding BMT also unlocks the 'case library', which contains 'bubble characteristics of past failed projects' and 'funding signals before bull coins rise'; after studying for a few days, you can grasp the essentials.
Stop envying others for being able to 'read data'—Bubblemaps has already lowered the analysis barrier; with it as a tool, beginners can also find direction on-chain. $BMT