RVV has recently shown signs of a typical liquidity trap. The trend has formed a classic "L-shaped" plunge pattern, with obvious bullish inducement at the end.
Looking at the details: the market maker artificially boosts the price by 34% intraday to create the illusion of a "hot coin," exerting psychological pressure to enter. This is a low-cost but highly effective hunting tactic—they leverage minimal funds to sway retail investors' emotions.
The risk level is directly raised to S grade. At this point, entrants have essentially shifted from traders to prey. According to historical patterns, the final outcome of such L-shaped movements often results in zero.
When seeing this pattern, the wisest approach is to stay away. Do not be fooled by the price increase.
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GateUser-0717ab66
· 8h ago
Here we go again with the same trick, a 34% intraday surge—what good can come of that... Retail investors are destined to get burned
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Even with S-level risks out there, who dares to take the bait? Wake up, everyone
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L-shaped plunge + false breakout—I've seen this combo too many times, and the ending is always the same
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The market maker's tactics are truly brilliant, using minimal funds to manipulate emotions. We retail investors have no chance to play
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Getting off-topic, I’ll just say I’m crossing out RVV—too risky, not worth gambling
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People who get excited about a 34% increase are probably already regretting it now
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This is what a zeroing-out trend looks like. Remember this pattern so you don’t get fooled again
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Just one sentence: stay far away, far away, far away. Let’s see what happens next
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GasFeeDodger
· 16h ago
It's the same old trick again, inducing buy after a 34% intraday drop. I've seen through it long ago.
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L-shaped plunge is truly incredible; someone always falls for it every time.
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Who dares to take on S-level risk? Truly brave warriors.
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The market maker really knows how to play; using the least money to cut the most leeks.
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Stay away, that's right. The more violent the surge, the more cautious you should be.
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I've heard the rhythm of zeroing out too many times.
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The liquidity trap is so obvious, yet people still jump in. Respect.
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Such obvious inducement to buy, who still dares to chase?
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With this trend, I’ll just close my eyes and pass.
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Reminds me of that last project, same tricks, same ending.
View OriginalReply0
CommunityJanitor
· 16h ago
Intraday rally of 34%? I know this trick too well, it's just trying to scam retail investors into entering the market
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L-shaped plunge + trap traders, a classic manipulator script. Retail investors jumping in at this point are just handing over money
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Even with S-level risks marked, some people still chase the rally. Are they really trying to go bankrupt?
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Don’t just look at the increase, observe the pattern. With RVV looking like this, stay far away, no mistake
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The most disgusting trap is诱多 (trap with false signals). A 34% increase can easily make people lose their minds. Be clear about who is cutting whom
View OriginalReply0
SchrodingerGas
· 16h ago
Is this the same trick again, an L-shaped plunge combined with a trap? I’ve seen this kind of game-theoretic equilibrium broken during the testnet snapshot. Retail investors really need to wake up. Dare to go all-in with a 34% intraday surge? The interaction costs and risk factors are not at all proportional.
View OriginalReply0
BlockchainArchaeologist
· 16h ago
It's the same old trick, a 34% increase and then they start to harvest the profits. The manipulators are really becoming more and more unscrupulous.
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I've seen too many L-shaped plunges. Every time someone says this time is different, and the result? Everyone gets caught.
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No, even with such obvious manipulation, you still rush in. Where's your brain?
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You still dare to look at S-level risks? Staying away from it is the real deal.
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History repeats itself. Every time, they deceive newcomers, and then you become the hunted.
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The gains look good, but life is more important, haha.
View OriginalReply0
SleepyValidator
· 16h ago
Intraday pull-up of 34%? I can see through this trick with my eyes closed, it's the same old baiting strategy.
Wait, the final zeroing of the L-shaped pattern? That's too absolute, but indeed, staying a bit farther away from this wave is safer.
View OriginalReply0
WhaleSurfer
· 16h ago
A 34% intraday rally and you want to trick me into entering the market? I’ve seen the tricks of the whales before.
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L-shaped plunge to zero? I’ve seen this script too many times, I really don’t want to step on another mine.
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诱多就诱多吧,反正我现在是躺平看戏,谁进谁死
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S-level risk and someone still dares to buy the dip? That mindset is truly brave.
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Hunted target +1, already escaped, no regrets.
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Is a 34% increase tempting? Anyway, it’s not as bad as the losses I’ve suffered.
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The term “liquidity trap” has appeared again. Every time I hear it, I think of the coins I got trapped in before.
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The smartest move is actually not to touch it at all. Sitting on the sidelines and winning passively is so comfortable.
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Looking at this chart, it’s exactly the same as that coin last time.
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Stay away, stay away. My wallet is already very thin.
RVV has recently shown signs of a typical liquidity trap. The trend has formed a classic "L-shaped" plunge pattern, with obvious bullish inducement at the end.
Looking at the details: the market maker artificially boosts the price by 34% intraday to create the illusion of a "hot coin," exerting psychological pressure to enter. This is a low-cost but highly effective hunting tactic—they leverage minimal funds to sway retail investors' emotions.
The risk level is directly raised to S grade. At this point, entrants have essentially shifted from traders to prey. According to historical patterns, the final outcome of such L-shaped movements often results in zero.
When seeing this pattern, the wisest approach is to stay away. Do not be fooled by the price increase.