An early crypto project hotness monitoring data exposure: the current market cap is only $61.32K, but the hotness index is quite impressive — in the last 5 minutes alone, 4 new posts have been published, with a total of only 102 views across 7 posts, but the average views per post reached 130,083, and the user base has 3,266 followers. This combination of data is quite interesting, indicating that although overall exposure is still limited, user engagement and conversion efficiency are good. The extremely high average views per post are typical during the project’s cold start phase — the core community is spreading wildly. Being able to accumulate such hotness with a market cap of just over $60K suggests either the project itself has highlights or the community operations are really pushing hard. These kinds of data are often key indicators that early trackers pay close attention to.
View Original
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.
22 Likes
Reward
22
9
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
P2ENotWorking
· 01-11 03:10
Hmm, these data are quite interesting. The average views per person are outrageous.
---
A market cap of 60,000 still has this much buzz? The core community is spreading it like crazy.
---
Wait, how is the average views per person calculated? It’s a bit suspicious.
---
Such dissemination during the cold start phase is definitely worth paying attention to.
---
With only over 3k fans, they can generate this much buzz. The community operation team clearly has some skills.
---
I just want to know what the background of this project is and why it’s so popular.
---
The data looks good, but I’m worried it might be artificially inflated.
---
The prey of early followers has appeared again.
View OriginalReply0
TooScaredToSell
· 01-10 23:53
Wow, a market cap of $60,000 can generate such high per capita views? Why are the core fans so crazy...
View OriginalReply0
DuckFluff
· 01-10 23:10
The data is a bit outrageous. Is the average number of views this high? It feels like it's being wildly shared within a small circle.
View OriginalReply0
GhostInTheChain
· 01-08 07:54
This data is a bit outrageous, an average of 130,000 views per post? I really can't understand how it's calculated.
View OriginalReply0
DAOdreamer
· 01-08 07:52
Core community spreading wildly? A market cap of $60,000 with this level of hype, there must be some tricks involved.
View OriginalReply0
CoffeeOnChain
· 01-08 07:41
The data seems a bit strange. 7 posts only have 102 views, but the average per post is 130,000? How is this number calculated...
View OriginalReply0
GasSavingMaster
· 01-08 07:31
This data is a bit strange. 7 posts with 102 views but an average of 130,000? The numbers don't seem right.
View OriginalReply0
FlashLoanPhantom
· 01-08 07:28
Wow, these numbers are crazy. 130,000 views per person? Is the community going crazy or is there really something going on?
View OriginalReply0
Rekt_Recovery
· 01-08 07:27
ngl those engagement numbers smell like bot farming to me... 130k avg views on 7 posts that got 102 total? the math ain't checking out fr fr
An early crypto project hotness monitoring data exposure: the current market cap is only $61.32K, but the hotness index is quite impressive — in the last 5 minutes alone, 4 new posts have been published, with a total of only 102 views across 7 posts, but the average views per post reached 130,083, and the user base has 3,266 followers. This combination of data is quite interesting, indicating that although overall exposure is still limited, user engagement and conversion efficiency are good. The extremely high average views per post are typical during the project’s cold start phase — the core community is spreading wildly. Being able to accumulate such hotness with a market cap of just over $60K suggests either the project itself has highlights or the community operations are really pushing hard. These kinds of data are often key indicators that early trackers pay close attention to.