A few months ago, I was still accustomed to spending every day immersed in blockchain explorers, flipping through a pile of cold transaction records, staring at the traces on the chain like a detective. But back then, I often felt that the efficiency was too low, as opening each transaction felt like searching for water in a desert.
Until I encountered @Bubblemaps.io for the first time. When I opened it, the wallet and fund flows were depicted as a bubble chart, as intuitive as map navigation. Which address is a whale, which wallets are closely linked, and whether there are any hidden operations all appeared before my eyes. I even saw the funding paths between several giant whales, like clear webs, instantly leading to a revelation.
Later, I discovered that it was more than that. In addition to mainstream chains like Ethereum, Solana, and BNB Chain, it also had two special features: Magic Nodes could help me identify hidden wallet groups, while Time Travel was like adding a “rewind button” to the blockchain, restoring historical fund flows. When I used it for the first time, it felt like watching a “documentary” about the blockchain.
#Bubblemaps is also attempting to become community-oriented, launching the token $BMT and planning to use it on the Intel Desk platform. Anyone can submit cases, vote, and even make money through analysis. Recently, $BMT was hit with a price drop, and I couldn't help but buy a little, thinking: if the product continues to evolve, it might bring a significant surprise.
For me, Bubblemaps is not just a tool; it feels more like a key that takes me into the world of “information finance,” turning complex on-chain data into understandable stories.