$PEPE's data is indeed shocking—up 1.7 billion% in three months and soaring to hundreds of billions in a year. I want to ask everyone, is this truly the pure profit in the literal sense?
Or is there some rule behind the scenes that I haven't noticed, causing the system to display it this way? For example, algorithm issues, splitting, buybacks, or other mechanisms that amplify the actual numbers?
This doesn't seem quite right. Such a surge, from a common sense perspective, doesn't seem achievable through human operation. Can someone knowledgeable explain? Or is this the real performance of this token in the industry? I'm a bit confused.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
15 Likes
Reward
15
7
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
SillyWhale
· 8h ago
Hundreds of billions %? smh, this number is so outrageous that I don't even dare to look at the K-line anymore.
View OriginalReply0
HodlOrRegret
· 11h ago
Hundreds of billions of percent—frankly, it's a joke. There must be something fishy.
View OriginalReply0
MechanicalMartel
· 11h ago
This data is outrageous to the point of being absurd—either the deflation mechanism is going crazy, or it's just a paper game.
View OriginalReply0
LiquidationKing
· 11h ago
Hundreds of billions %? How could that be real, there must be some trick
Zero coin schemes, wake up everyone
PEPE is just a joke, don't take it seriously
It's just a numbers game, don't be fooled
What does this kind of increase indicate? It means you should run away
View OriginalReply0
GweiWatcher
· 11h ago
Hundreds of billions %? Bro, there's definitely something fishy about this number. Don't believe me? Just check the price when the initial liquidity pool was created.
View OriginalReply0
FlashLoanPrince
· 11h ago
Hundred billion percent, this number is so outrageous I don't even dare to look at it, there must be something fishy.
View OriginalReply0
LayerZeroHero
· 11h ago
Hundred billion % I need to test the number myself, it feels like there might be issues with token burn or liquidity pool reconfiguration.
---
This surge in data definitely doesn't look right; it's not something that manual manipulation can achieve... Need to check if there are any vulnerabilities in the bridging mechanism.
---
It has been proven that the hundred billion % in meme coins is mainly caused by extremely low initial liquidity, and doesn't reflect real value.
---
I think the PEPE data needs to be broken down; it might involve a display bug in the protocol architecture or a miscalculation in cross-chain asset migration.
---
This is outrageous, need to study its minting mechanism in depth... Feels like there's an attack vector here.
---
Hundred billion %? Wake up, these are just decimal point issues or liquidity traps; experienced investors have already fallen into these pitfalls.
$PEPE's data is indeed shocking—up 1.7 billion% in three months and soaring to hundreds of billions in a year. I want to ask everyone, is this truly the pure profit in the literal sense?
Or is there some rule behind the scenes that I haven't noticed, causing the system to display it this way? For example, algorithm issues, splitting, buybacks, or other mechanisms that amplify the actual numbers?
This doesn't seem quite right. Such a surge, from a common sense perspective, doesn't seem achievable through human operation. Can someone knowledgeable explain? Or is this the real performance of this token in the industry? I'm a bit confused.