Rumour.app is lighting up with whispers that Stable’s launch wasn’t organic — it might’ve been a coordinated Manifold Trading play.
The storyline reads like a DeFi drama:
after getting ousted from Plasma, insiders claim Manifold forked the original codebase, swapped the founding devs for “corporate replacements,” and parachuted in Kazemian as CTO.
It’s the blockchain equivalent of a coup — polite, technical, and backed by whales.
Then comes the twist: a BTSE whale allegedly funded the vault that fueled Stable’s liquidity surge — a vault big enough to bend price curves and lock in nine-figure profit control.
If that’s true, the entire Stable rollout looks less like community growth and more like precision-engineered financial theatre.
This isn’t just another “project launch.”
It’s a case study in how on-chain manipulation hides behind governance proposals and PR-friendly buzzwords like “community fork.”
Decentralization, when you zoom in, sometimes looks a lot like a hedge fund in a hoodie.
Investors will soon realize that this isn’t about whether Stable’s protocol is secure — it’s about whether its narrative is free.
And if whales are now writing the plot, maybe decentralization really has become the new corporate playbook.
Verdict: If true, it’s a fascinating power move.
If false, it’s still the best free marketing Stable could’ve bought. Either way, attention = liquidity.
