Want to check tokens but get dizzy from the raw data of Etherscan and Solscan? Try @Bubblemaps.io , which transforms on-chain data from 6 chains (Ethereum, Solana, etc.) into an easy-to-understand bubble chart, and you can get started with 4 simple rules.
Each bubble represents a wallet, only showing the top 150 holders; the larger the bubble, the more tokens held; if two bubbles are connected by a line, it indicates there has been a transfer of native coins on-chain (like ETH, SOL).
It's more practical to find patterns: the bubble cluster of Hellborn NFTs (Avalanche) may be marketing payments or pre-sales; Turbo (ETH) has a central bubble linked to over 30 wallets, and looking at the transfers reveals it's a pre-sale (everyone transfers ETH in, and the tokens are issued out).
The most critical thing is to avoid pitfalls, such as BHLTC (SOL), where the central wallet holds 110 bubbles, accounting for 91% of the tokens, while issuing both SOL and tokens uniformly — this highly concentrated situation is clearly problematic.
No need to learn complex analysis, just open @Bubblemaps.io and take a glance at the bubbles, and you'll clearly understand token distribution, associated wallets, and risk points; it's much more reliable than just looking at block explorers.