After a certain new coin opened, several tens of thousands of dollars worth of bottom chips were drained, but fortunately there were no signs of a rug pull. Subsequently, continuous transfers to exchanges were made, claiming to be buybacks. But this is strange—sending buybacks to exchanges and destroying tokens by sending them to black holes or big V accounts, what's the real difference? They are all just narratives to reduce circulating supply. This trick has been played out for years; transferring coins to exchanges and then waiting to be listed on mainstream exchanges—many people are immersed in this illusion. The question is, why can this old trick still be used to raise prices these days? Where is the true innovation?

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GateUser-e87b21eevip
· 01-20 10:13
Old tricks again, honestly these buyback narratives are just the same old story with a different dressing. Are new coins still relying on this? That's underestimating retail investors' intelligence too much. Buybacks, burns, transferring to big V influencers—no matter how fancy the story, it's all the same. The funny thing is, some people actually believe it—transferring funds to exchanges can make the price go up? Dream on. These tricks have been outdated for years, and they're still used to deceive people—how lacking in imagination can they be? Where have the real projects gone? It's all these air coins putting on a show.
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AlwaysQuestioningvip
· 01-19 16:52
It's the same old trick again, truly impressive --- Buyback black hole destruction, honestly it's all just a deceptive narrative, no real difference --- A new generation replaces the old, there's always believers in this story --- It's 2024 and you're still playing these tricks? Where's the innovation, brother? --- So who exactly believes this story... --- Transferring to an exchange = listing on a mainstream exchange? That logic is incredible --- Taking out tens of thousands of dollars in chips, then buyback and hype to drive up the price, you can still see this nowadays --- I just want to ask, does transferring to an exchange and black hole burning look different to users? --- There are still quite a few people immersed in illusions, always the same script every time --- Real innovation has long been gone, now it's all just copy and paste
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Degentlemanvip
· 01-19 16:43
The old tricks with a new disguise can still make a quick profit, truly impressive.
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LiquidityWizardvip
· 01-17 10:58
Old tricks with a new look, and some people still fall for it.
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SolidityStrugglervip
· 01-17 10:44
How many times has this shell been changed, and some people still really believe it.
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ImpermanentTherapistvip
· 01-17 10:41
Old tricks with a new disguise, still scamming, truly impressive.
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MoneyBurnerSocietyvip
· 01-17 10:38
The bottom chips are taken out, and you still want to play the "buyback" game? I really didn't expect the old script to be so deceptive. Same old story, just tell a story and someone will take the bait. The adaptability of retail investors is really strong. Instead of studying buybacks, it's better to figure out how to survive and make money... difficult. The narrative of circulating supply has been overused for a long time, who still believes it these days... Wait, it seems like quite a few people still believe it? I choose to believe that this time is different... (lying to myself) This is our daily routine, studying the methods of how each public chain cuts retail investors with a microscope. Waiting for the dream of being listed on an exchange, which is even more distant than my account recovering.
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ParanoiaKingvip
· 01-17 10:29
It's the same old trick again, are there really people falling for it? Buyback black hole destruction, basically the same scam in different clothes. How can this coin still be increasing in price? Are there really fools with lots of money? It's all a liquidity game, same old story with a different flavor. Wake up, everyone. We've seen this plot many times before. I just want to know when we'll see something genuine.
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