In prediction markets like Polymarket, the most terrifying thing is never some advanced black technology algorithm, but those blatant "insider trading" activities.
Someone uncovered a set of wallet addresses—Outsmarter, Pelminus, kgdf2000, and others—and their trading patterns revealed a harsh truth: these guys are not predicting at all, but actually cashing out.
This is the true face of so-called "genius traders." At first glance, their operations seem flawless—timing is precise, position management is proper, and the profit curve is perfect—but a closer look at the trading sequences reveals the problem. The order logic of these wallets doesn't resemble market prediction; instead, it looks like they already knew certain information. Their entry timing is too suspicious, their exits too straightforward, with no human hesitation in between.
Even more striking is that when major events are still brewing and the market is in the dark, these wallets have already quietly built positions. When the news finally breaks, they immediately arbitrage and exit. The rhythm is so perfectly matched, it’s as if someone is reading the news to them backstage.
This is the unseen game on Polymarket. The information gap here is not just an advantage, but practically a privilege.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
11 Likes
Reward
11
3
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
TokenomicsTrapper
· 12h ago
actually if you read the transaction logs, the pattern matching here is *textbook* insider playbook... those wallet addresses literally telegraphing the move before the news drops. called this months ago tbh.
Reply0
wagmi_eventually
· 12h ago
This is what Web3 really looks like; information asymmetry is everything.
View OriginalReply0
SnapshotDayLaborer
· 12h ago
The market manipulation trick, to put it plainly, is just insiders rushing ahead.
In prediction markets like Polymarket, the most terrifying thing is never some advanced black technology algorithm, but those blatant "insider trading" activities.
Someone uncovered a set of wallet addresses—Outsmarter, Pelminus, kgdf2000, and others—and their trading patterns revealed a harsh truth: these guys are not predicting at all, but actually cashing out.
This is the true face of so-called "genius traders." At first glance, their operations seem flawless—timing is precise, position management is proper, and the profit curve is perfect—but a closer look at the trading sequences reveals the problem. The order logic of these wallets doesn't resemble market prediction; instead, it looks like they already knew certain information. Their entry timing is too suspicious, their exits too straightforward, with no human hesitation in between.
Even more striking is that when major events are still brewing and the market is in the dark, these wallets have already quietly built positions. When the news finally breaks, they immediately arbitrage and exit. The rhythm is so perfectly matched, it’s as if someone is reading the news to them backstage.
This is the unseen game on Polymarket. The information gap here is not just an advantage, but practically a privilege.