The recent $BREV market movement reveals some of the manipulative tactics used by the whales.
First, the -2% fee rate setting clearly aims to fail in climbing the rankings on a major exchange, then attract retail investors with low fees to boost expectations. Once the ranking climb fails and long investors are trapped, their mentality worsens—cutting losses requires courage, and dragging it out makes it easier for others to take over the position.
The real rhythm is like this: positive news pushes the price higher → high gains attract traffic → simultaneously, the fee advantage entices new funds to enter. From the market perspective, whales mainly manipulate a major exchange by offloading tokens, while other platforms' fee pressures are relatively insignificant because liquidity is limited.
In terms of trading strategy, this logical chain is quite methodical—using the ranking mechanism, fee differences, and emotional expectations to form a closed loop. But in execution, it still appears fairly routine, with no particularly innovative methods. Essentially, it’s exploiting a loophole within the exchange ecosystem and repeatedly using it.
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StakoorNeverSleeps
· 4h ago
The dealer's tricks are indeed old-fashioned, and their bait with the fee rate is played out poorly.
Retail investors who get trapped are really pitiful; once their mentality collapses, they can only cut losses and admit defeat.
But to be fair, this kind of manipulation is still quite popular in the exchange ecosystem.
When can we, the little guys, finally avoid falling into these traps?
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ForkTongue
· 22h ago
Oh no, it's the same old story. The manipulators' tactics are getting worse, with no new tricks at all.
Either cut losses or hold on, in the end, you're just going to get eaten.
Fees are really just a bait, aren't they?
Looking at this logic, I can't help but think of that last project, the tactics are exactly the same.
It seems like the current players are just riding on past achievements; their creativity has long since gone bankrupt.
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BlockchainArchaeologist
· 01-08 17:49
The dealer's tricks are indeed old school; the fee rate inducement is just a trap. I've seen too many bagholders fall for it.
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gas_fee_therapy
· 01-07 18:53
It's the same old trick again—trying to lure people in with a -2% fee rate? Wake up, everyone.
This is the extent of the manipulators' tactics; they've played it out so many times that it's boring.
This guy's analysis is quite insightful, but I still don't understand why people still fall for it.
Low fees and going all-in—truly mind-blowing.
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TestnetFreeloader
· 01-07 18:51
Old tricks, the low-fee approach has been played out long ago, and it's always the same script.
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SchroedingerAirdrop
· 01-07 18:44
The low-fee scheme, to put it simply, is a bait; retail investors will never escape this trap.
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ChainDetective
· 01-07 18:42
It's the same old trick again—-2% fee rate is really unbeatable, retail investors are being drawn in one by one.
The big players are just exploiting people's greed for a bargain; the day the leaderboard fails is the moment to harvest.
This level of operation is honestly quite average, but it never fails.
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RugPullAlertBot
· 01-07 18:39
Same old trick again, daring to use that broken method with a -2% fee? Is the ranking mechanism so easy to deceive?
The recent $BREV market movement reveals some of the manipulative tactics used by the whales.
First, the -2% fee rate setting clearly aims to fail in climbing the rankings on a major exchange, then attract retail investors with low fees to boost expectations. Once the ranking climb fails and long investors are trapped, their mentality worsens—cutting losses requires courage, and dragging it out makes it easier for others to take over the position.
The real rhythm is like this: positive news pushes the price higher → high gains attract traffic → simultaneously, the fee advantage entices new funds to enter. From the market perspective, whales mainly manipulate a major exchange by offloading tokens, while other platforms' fee pressures are relatively insignificant because liquidity is limited.
In terms of trading strategy, this logical chain is quite methodical—using the ranking mechanism, fee differences, and emotional expectations to form a closed loop. But in execution, it still appears fairly routine, with no particularly innovative methods. Essentially, it’s exploiting a loophole within the exchange ecosystem and repeatedly using it.