Do you want to check the tokens but are confused about the raw data from Etherscan and Solscan? Try @Bubblemaps.io . It converts on-chain data from six chains (Ethereum, Solana, etc.) into easy-to-understand bubble charts. Four simple rules will help you get started.

Each bubble represents a wallet, showing only the top 150 holders. The larger the bubble, the more tokens are held. If the bubbles are connected by a line, it means that native tokens (like ETH or SOL) have been transferred on-chain.

The most practical approach is to look for patterns: bubble clusters in Hellborn NFTs (Avalanche) can indicate marketing payments or pre-sales; the central bubble of Turbo (ETH) is linked to more than 30 wallets, and by looking at the transfers, you can tell it’s a pre-sale (everyone is transferring ETH, and the tokens are being issued).

The most important thing is to prevent scams. For example, BHLTC (SOL) has a central wallet containing 110 bubbles, representing 91% of the tokens, and issues SOL and tokens uniformly. This extreme centralization raises issues at first glance.

No need to learn complex analytics, just open @Bubblemaps.io and take a look at the bubble, and you will clearly see the distribution of tokens, the wallets associated with them, and the risk points. It is much more reliable than just looking at a block explorer.

#Bubblemaps $BMT