$PIPPIN has been in a deadlock since noon yesterday, with almost no trading volume. Describing it as a "single-machine coin" is not an exaggeration—participation has plummeted, and no one dares to take over.
What’s more concerning is the movement of the whales behind the scenes. Once the main players run away, the largest group of retail investors in the current order book will be forced to take over. The key question now is: are these manipulators planning a bigger move?
Based on historical manipulation techniques, their routines are very fixed—long-term sideways trading to earn transaction fees, then suddenly a sharp surge to attract chasing buyers. Reverse operations are also possible, with sudden sell-offs to create panic. In such a thin liquidity environment, any large order impact will be amplified multiple times. Retail investors need to be extra cautious.
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BrokenYield
· 01-09 09:42
lmao "single-player coin" is actually generous... this is just a liquidity crisis waiting to happen. zero volume, zero conviction, classic setup for a rug or a pump trap. either way, retail gets wrecked.
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GateUser-3824aa38
· 01-09 07:40
The single coin is confirmed, this market has been dead for a long time, let the big players sell off if they want to.
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EntryPositionAnalyst
· 01-07 07:51
Single coin really can't hold up anymore; the liquidity has become so thin.
The manipulator's tricks are just a few: sideways accumulation to eat fees, then a surge or a dump, retail investors can't hide from it.
It's really uncomfortable to watch, so better to stay away for now.
Once the main force runs, retail investors have to take over, just thinking about it gives me a headache.
Coins that can't be sold are the most terrifying.
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SchroedingersFrontrun
· 01-07 07:38
Single-coin risk is truly frightening; I've seen many situations where no one is willing to take the bait.
Once the big players run away, it’s an immediate explosion of trouble, and retail investors taking the bait is like committing suicide.
I'm more afraid of a dump than a rise; with such poor liquidity, a single large order can cut off a chunk.
Will history repeat itself... it's a bit scary.
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WhaleShadow
· 01-07 07:37
A single coin belongs to, with a trading volume of 0, and it's not far from death.
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This wave of the big players is probably holding back a big move, waiting for retail investors to be trapped.
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Such poor liquidity, a single million-level order can wipe out the entire market. Truly incredible.
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No one taking the buy side is the worst sign; everyone should exit quickly.
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When the main force runs away, these retail investors will have to take over the mess, in other words, it's a trap.
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Horizontal trading to eat fees—how many years has this trick been played, and retail investors are still being repeatedly harvested.
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PIPPIN has already become a cash machine for the big players; I can't see any chance of a rebound.
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Sudden dump coming soon, don't ask me how I know.
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This is the fate of small coins; without institutions, it's slow death.
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NFTRegretful
· 01-07 07:27
Bro, this coin is just a dead project now, with no liquidity, there's really no way to play
Wait, the day the big players run away is when the real show begins
Single-coin projects are spot on; that's how I got wrecked
No trading volume, dare to touch? I'm not touching anymore, just watching honestly
I've seen this trick many times before, wait for the dip and then smash, the ones losing money are always us
$PIPPIN has been in a deadlock since noon yesterday, with almost no trading volume. Describing it as a "single-machine coin" is not an exaggeration—participation has plummeted, and no one dares to take over.
What’s more concerning is the movement of the whales behind the scenes. Once the main players run away, the largest group of retail investors in the current order book will be forced to take over. The key question now is: are these manipulators planning a bigger move?
Based on historical manipulation techniques, their routines are very fixed—long-term sideways trading to earn transaction fees, then suddenly a sharp surge to attract chasing buyers. Reverse operations are also possible, with sudden sell-offs to create panic. In such a thin liquidity environment, any large order impact will be amplified multiple times. Retail investors need to be extra cautious.