Some early supporters carry red flags worth watching. If someone's been in a project from day one, they're often suspiciously close to the core team—raise your guard. This pattern has played out before: they back coins early, the community grows, then vanish when things get profitable. Look at the timeline: projects hit significant valuations ($50M+ MC range), then these insiders suddenly exit. That's not coincidence. The history speaks for itself—multiple documented cases of early adopters turning out to be part of coordinated moves. Before you follow anyone's call, dig into their track record. One rug pull might be bad luck. Two? That's a pattern. Do your own research on who's been in the room from the start, because proximity to the deployer often means proximity to the exit door.
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ForkLibertarian
· 4h ago
Really, once the early group close to the core team starts to leave one or two at a time, it's time to be cautious.
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SandwichTrader
· 4h ago
I've seen this trick too many times. The early participants are almost certainly team insiders playing tricks.
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TokenUnlocker
· 4h ago
It's the same old story again, early entrants are all insiders, lol.
Some early supporters carry red flags worth watching. If someone's been in a project from day one, they're often suspiciously close to the core team—raise your guard. This pattern has played out before: they back coins early, the community grows, then vanish when things get profitable. Look at the timeline: projects hit significant valuations ($50M+ MC range), then these insiders suddenly exit. That's not coincidence. The history speaks for itself—multiple documented cases of early adopters turning out to be part of coordinated moves. Before you follow anyone's call, dig into their track record. One rug pull might be bad luck. Two? That's a pattern. Do your own research on who's been in the room from the start, because proximity to the deployer often means proximity to the exit door.