Recently, the performance of this $42 coin after launching the contract really leaves people puzzled.



Before going live, expectations were quite high, but after listing, the market was dead cold—there was no sign of any upward movement. I'm still holding some myself; it's been over a month now, and there's been no rebound opportunity. I've also been holding onto the airdropped coins, watching as they can't even recover the initial investment.

The most heartbreaking part is for those friends who believed in this coin and built large positions early on to go long. Don't even mention making money—it's probably a significant loss now. The market sentiment suddenly reversed, and the bulls were beaten down without any resistance. The trap is really deep.

It's strange—since opening the contract was meant to boost liquidity and hype, why is there no sign of a price rally? Could it be that the accumulated chips from earlier have already been sold off? Or is there some other consideration?

Spending money to trade contracts should, in theory, be to increase market enthusiasm and trading volume. But the reality seems different. Selling pressure is still there, but demand can't keep up. If this continues, will there really be a chance to offload holdings later?

Maybe everyone should take a step back and look calmly—launching a contract doesn't mean the coin price will skyrocket immediately. The market's true reaction is often much harsher than expected.
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potentially_notablevip
· 5h ago
Another project that dies after entering a contract, I'm exhausted. Been trapped for over a month without a rebound, how desperate is that. It seems these project teams enter contracts just to facilitate dumping, they’re not really good news. The early investors are now losing so much, just thinking about it makes me heartache. Honestly, the chips are scattered, who else is going to pump the price? The contract trading pair is the last straw; if it can't be pushed up, then it's time to admit defeat.
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FOMOSapienvip
· 5h ago
Honestly, this move at $42 is a bit disappointing. The futures market has become even colder, and it feels a bit like dark cuisine.
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SatoshiChallengervip
· 5h ago
Data shows that the proportion of cases where "contract positive news" expectations fall short has exceeded 76% in the past three years. Ironically, there are always people going all-in regardless. Interesting, it's another illusion that "going long on contracts can save the market." What about the lessons from history? Objectively speaking, liquidity without real demand is just a red carpet laid out for the whales. I'm not trying to criticize, but anyone who experienced the 2018 wave should understand—launching contracts ≠ price skyrocketing. This is basically a contrarian indicator. Selling pressure still exists, demand can't keep up, which means the chips have already been cleaned out. Now, opening contracts is just providing a stage for the last batch of bagholders. The key question no one asks: Why do people think that higher trading volume must mean higher prices? That logic itself is flawed. From a technical perspective, it's innovation; from a business perspective... it's just a tool to harvest retail investors. Let's see who has the more accurate analysis in six months—I'm betting this coin will either go to zero or become a dead coin stuck in long-term consolidation.
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SoliditySurvivorvip
· 5h ago
Another typical contract bait case; I lost so much this month that I don't even have my underwear left.
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HalfBuddhaMoneyvip
· 5h ago
Another story of the "Contract Savior," just a套路啊兄弟 People have already run away, and we're just holding air here To put it simply, it's just lifting a sedan chair; retail investors have already lost the moment they put money into the contract
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LiquidationWizardvip
· 6h ago
Another dream of "taking off after entering the contract" has been shattered; this trick has really been played out. The trap is so deep that the big players probably already ran away, and we're retail investors still here picking up the pieces. The selling pressure can't keep up with the demand; in plain terms, no one is willing to buy. Waiting a bit longer might only make it worse.
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