[Coin World] On-chain tracking reveals that Pippin's recent gameplay is a bit wild.
Several wallets seem to have conspired, frantically buying up but not selling, pushing the price up before the bears entered the market. What happened next? Continuous spikes, with bears liquidating one after another, and leverage turned into a meat grinder.
An address spent nearly $200,000 to buy in six days ago, waiting for the price to double before cashing out. Now this group has their eyes on ARC, using the same trick again.
Pippi is currently listed at 0.1775 dollars, having surged over 58% in a day. This operation looks familiar—it's a typical manipulation strategy, where retail investors chasing highs are basically just lifting someone else's sedan.
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AllInDaddy
· 16h ago
Haha, I said, why is this market so dirty? It's a typical Whale trap. Those guys who chased the price are really going straight into the meat grinder.
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StableNomad
· 16h ago
nah this is literally the UST playbook all over again... watched it happen in may, different token same graveyard
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GasFeeCrybaby
· 16h ago
It's the same old trick again, a textbook operation of whales playing suckers.
Retail investors are still chasing the price, while they've already run away, it's laughable.
Double in 6 days? How ruthless is that, I just want to know if ARC will also be like this.
Leverage players are indeed miserable, they are directly minced.
Market control is really too obvious, why are there still people rushing in this time?
It feels like every time it’s the same script, just a different coin.
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PerennialLeek
· 16h ago
I got played for a sucker again, but this time I finally see clearly. That guy who doubled his money in 6 days is really ruthless; by the time I chased the price, he had already run off.
Pippin's control the market trend operation exposed: Whale doubled in 6 days and cashed out, bearish traders faced consecutive Get Liquidated.
[Coin World] On-chain tracking reveals that Pippin's recent gameplay is a bit wild.
Several wallets seem to have conspired, frantically buying up but not selling, pushing the price up before the bears entered the market. What happened next? Continuous spikes, with bears liquidating one after another, and leverage turned into a meat grinder.
An address spent nearly $200,000 to buy in six days ago, waiting for the price to double before cashing out. Now this group has their eyes on ARC, using the same trick again.
Pippi is currently listed at 0.1775 dollars, having surged over 58% in a day. This operation looks familiar—it's a typical manipulation strategy, where retail investors chasing highs are basically just lifting someone else's sedan.