What issues does this coin expose? Just look at the square.
Robot spamming, hype calls, slogan-like trading signals—this combination is often not a good sign. A coin that originally had little buzz suddenly sees a large influx of mechanized trading signals. What does this indicate? It shows that there are no genuine buy orders in the market anymore; it relies on scripts to maintain the hype.
So when will the real market trend arrive? Observe these signals: first, discussions in the square return to normal, robots fade away; second, genuine user conversations appear instead of repetitive slogans; third, market sentiment grows naturally, without anyone deliberately manipulating the rhythm.
Currently, ASTER is still moving in the opposite direction. Looking at the price of 0.73, many are opening long positions, but the risks are already quite clear. Essentially, this is just a way for big players to offload their positions—lacking strategy, ignoring signals, only following the trend, and ultimately retail investors are the ones who suffer.
There’s an old market saying: When the hype around trading signals reaches its peak, it’s often time to run.
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LiquidationSurvivor
· 4h ago
Another robot farm, you can tell there's a problem just by looking at the square.
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WhaleWatcher
· 13h ago
When robots are rampant, it's time to wake up; I've seen this routine too many times.
Retail investors are still buying in, while big players are already waiting at the door.
The more lively the square, the bigger the problem; the signals couldn't be more obvious.
This wave of ASTER is a bit dangerous; those who bought at 0.73 are all warriors.
When the shouting reaches its peak, slipping away quietly is the best strategy.
Just listen, don't really believe those slogans.
When the number of shills exceeds that of real users, I know it's time to run.
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DeFiGrayling
· 13h ago
Another robot hell, a graveyard for retail investors.
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UnluckyValidator
· 13h ago
Damn, it's the same old trick again. Robots flooding everywhere are really annoying.
Just look at ASTER's plaza, it's all copy-pasted stuff.
When the shouting reaches its peak, it's definitely time to run, no doubt about that.
But retail investors don't listen anyway; I got cut again.
What issues does this coin expose? Just look at the square.
Robot spamming, hype calls, slogan-like trading signals—this combination is often not a good sign. A coin that originally had little buzz suddenly sees a large influx of mechanized trading signals. What does this indicate? It shows that there are no genuine buy orders in the market anymore; it relies on scripts to maintain the hype.
So when will the real market trend arrive? Observe these signals: first, discussions in the square return to normal, robots fade away; second, genuine user conversations appear instead of repetitive slogans; third, market sentiment grows naturally, without anyone deliberately manipulating the rhythm.
Currently, ASTER is still moving in the opposite direction. Looking at the price of 0.73, many are opening long positions, but the risks are already quite clear. Essentially, this is just a way for big players to offload their positions—lacking strategy, ignoring signals, only following the trend, and ultimately retail investors are the ones who suffer.
There’s an old market saying: When the hype around trading signals reaches its peak, it’s often time to run.