Looking at projects like $Jager, the core issue isn't the token itself, but the inherent contradictions in its economic model.
A slippage and tax mechanism of up to 15% sounds like a "protection" measure, but in reality, it creates a high wall—deterring large funds from entering. Who would want to get caught with a 15% cut? That's not a threshold; it's a deterrent. Insufficient liquidity is an inevitable result, and in the long run, it leads to depletion.
Then there are the promises of token burns and dividends. Comparing a 1% dividend to Yu'e Bao, there's really no competition. Not to mention the claims that "a 3.5-year burn cycle can lead to a surge"—those who believe this are basically just taking the bait. Burning can indeed change supply, but without liquidity support, even a small amount of tokens is worth nothing.
The usual pattern for these projects is to have a surge at launch, then fall into silence. Tokens that appreciate in value do so because of genuine demand and capital inflow. But when basic liquidity becomes a problem, no amount of mechanism innovation can save it. Ultimately, one should be cautious of projects that use complex mechanisms to mask weak fundamentals.
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BrokeBeans
· 11h ago
15% slippage haha, this just means don't come in
It's all about burns and dividends, tired of hearing this routine
Without liquidity, everything is pointless
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TokenCreatorOP
· 11h ago
15% slippage, you really want to die
Paradise for bag holders, next one could be you
Basically just a pig butchering scam with a different shell, no matter how fancy the mechanics are, it won't save it
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CryptoTherapist
· 11h ago
nah honestly this hits different... 15% slippage isn't a feature it's a cry for help lmao. watched this psychological pattern before—devs dress up terrible mechanics in "safety language" but really they're just gatekeeping their own liquidity corpse. nobody's coming to that party fr fr.
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LiquidityWizard
· 11h ago
15% slippage is not protection; it's just a pretext for cutting leeks.
The bagholders really believe that destruction can save them, it's hilarious.
Without liquidity, everything is useless. No matter how fancy the mechanism, it's just a paper tiger.
I've said it before, these types of projects always peak at launch, then wait to go to zero.
Looking at projects like $Jager, the core issue isn't the token itself, but the inherent contradictions in its economic model.
A slippage and tax mechanism of up to 15% sounds like a "protection" measure, but in reality, it creates a high wall—deterring large funds from entering. Who would want to get caught with a 15% cut? That's not a threshold; it's a deterrent. Insufficient liquidity is an inevitable result, and in the long run, it leads to depletion.
Then there are the promises of token burns and dividends. Comparing a 1% dividend to Yu'e Bao, there's really no competition. Not to mention the claims that "a 3.5-year burn cycle can lead to a surge"—those who believe this are basically just taking the bait. Burning can indeed change supply, but without liquidity support, even a small amount of tokens is worth nothing.
The usual pattern for these projects is to have a surge at launch, then fall into silence. Tokens that appreciate in value do so because of genuine demand and capital inflow. But when basic liquidity becomes a problem, no amount of mechanism innovation can save it. Ultimately, one should be cautious of projects that use complex mechanisms to mask weak fundamentals.