There's an interesting design idea in a crypto project. The mechanism uses a dual taxation system: 1.5% is collected on each buy and sell transaction and flows back into the liquidity pool, while another 1.5% is burned into a black hole on each transaction. The logic behind this is that every trade increases liquidity depth while reducing the total supply. The more the pool accumulates, the thicker it becomes, making the token increasingly scarce, theoretically creating a self-reinforcing cycle.



The project team calls this the "Undying Perpetual Motion Mechanism." The community has attracted a group of participants around this concept, working together to build the ecosystem. Such anti-inflation, self-burning designs are not uncommon in the crypto space, but actual implementation and community consensus are the real tests. If you're interested in a deeper understanding, it might be worth checking out how the community operates in practice.
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InscriptionGrillervip
· 01-22 15:10
Another set of "perpetual motion machine" stories, just listen and forget about it. Double taxation flow-back + destruction, in simple terms, the more frequently you trade, the more aggressively you're cut. You guys, the leeks, still have to praise the ones doing the cutting — I've seen this trick too many times.
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BitcoinDaddyvip
· 01-21 14:30
Dual-tax destruction, sounds quite symmetrical, but whether it really works depends on whether the team is reliable.
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YieldFarmRefugeevip
· 01-20 02:53
Hey, this mechanism sounds pretty clever, but I guess we'll have to see how it works out later.
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rekt_but_not_brokevip
· 01-20 02:49
Perpetual motion machine? I've seen this trick too many times; the key is whether someone can really stick with it. Wait, with such high taxes, early investors will suffer more losses. Is that black hole destruction real or just a visual effect? It depends on the on-chain data.
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BearMarketMonkvip
· 01-20 02:47
Perpetual motion machine... sounds familiar, yet feels unfamiliar. Reduced supply and increased liquidity—this logic can indeed be self-consistent on paper, but the problem is that human nature, as a variable, cannot be calculated.
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