$PEPE's data is indeed shocking—up 1.7 billion% in three months and soaring to hundreds of billions in a year. I want to ask everyone, is this truly the pure profit in the literal sense?
Or is there some rule behind the scenes that I haven't noticed, causing the system to display it this way? For example, algorithm issues, splitting, buybacks, or other mechanisms that amplify the actual numbers?
This doesn't seem quite right. Such a surge, from a common sense perspective, doesn't seem achievable through human operation. Can someone knowledgeable explain? Or is this the real performance of this token in the industry? I'm a bit confused.
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JustHereForMemes
· 17h ago
Hundreds of billions of percent sounds outrageous; they've long been the world's richest person haha, there must be some tricks involved.
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Degen4Breakfast
· 23h ago
Hundred billion %? Bro, are you sure you didn't read the number wrong... This amplification magic is really impressive.
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SignatureCollector
· 01-04 14:56
Hundreds of billions of percent? Bro, this number itself is nonsense.
Wait, is this another decimal point game, showing hundreds of times as hundreds of billions of percent?
Coins like PEPE are like this—early liquidity is poor, and the hype is crazy, not surprising.
If you really want to talk about pure profit, it would be from the first batch of investments; later ones... well, you know.
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SillyWhale
· 01-03 06:50
Hundreds of billions %? smh, this number is so outrageous that I don't even dare to look at the K-line anymore.
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HodlOrRegret
· 01-03 03:57
Hundreds of billions of percent—frankly, it's a joke. There must be something fishy.
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MechanicalMartel
· 01-03 03:55
This data is outrageous to the point of being absurd—either the deflation mechanism is going crazy, or it's just a paper game.
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LiquidationKing
· 01-03 03:55
Hundreds of billions %? How could that be real, there must be some trick
Zero coin schemes, wake up everyone
PEPE is just a joke, don't take it seriously
It's just a numbers game, don't be fooled
What does this kind of increase indicate? It means you should run away
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GweiWatcher
· 01-03 03:46
Hundreds of billions %? Bro, there's definitely something fishy about this number. Don't believe me? Just check the price when the initial liquidity pool was created.
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FlashLoanPrince
· 01-03 03:40
Hundred billion percent, this number is so outrageous I don't even dare to look at it, there must be something fishy.
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LayerZeroHero
· 01-03 03:31
Hundred billion % I need to test the number myself, it feels like there might be issues with token burn or liquidity pool reconfiguration.
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This surge in data definitely doesn't look right; it's not something that manual manipulation can achieve... Need to check if there are any vulnerabilities in the bridging mechanism.
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It has been proven that the hundred billion % in meme coins is mainly caused by extremely low initial liquidity, and doesn't reflect real value.
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I think the PEPE data needs to be broken down; it might involve a display bug in the protocol architecture or a miscalculation in cross-chain asset migration.
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This is outrageous, need to study its minting mechanism in depth... Feels like there's an attack vector here.
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Hundred billion %? Wake up, these are just decimal point issues or liquidity traps; experienced investors have already fallen into these pitfalls.
$PEPE's data is indeed shocking—up 1.7 billion% in three months and soaring to hundreds of billions in a year. I want to ask everyone, is this truly the pure profit in the literal sense?
Or is there some rule behind the scenes that I haven't noticed, causing the system to display it this way? For example, algorithm issues, splitting, buybacks, or other mechanisms that amplify the actual numbers?
This doesn't seem quite right. Such a surge, from a common sense perspective, doesn't seem achievable through human operation. Can someone knowledgeable explain? Or is this the real performance of this token in the industry? I'm a bit confused.