Chapter 5: The Whale Dump – The Liquidity Bootstrapping Pool

Part One: The Silence Before the Storm

The LBP had been running for sixty-four hours. The community was exhausted but exhilarated. The Whale Bot’s coordinated sell-off had been neutralized, the curve had held, and the price had stabilized at $6.15. Only eight hours remained in the launch.

But something felt wrong to Rohan.

He’d been staring at the dashboard for hours, his eyes burning from the strain. The Whale Bot’s 172 wallets had sold everything—550,000 tokens—and vanished from the transaction logs. The bot had made a paltry 1.7% profit, barely worth the effort of its three-day accumulation.

Too easy, Rohan thought. It was too easy.

He pulled up the Whale Bot’s wallet history again. The 172 wallets had been liquidated, their funds transferred to a single address. The address was now dormant, its balance sitting at zero.

But something about the pattern nagged at him. The sell-off had been perfectly coordinated, perfectly timed. The Whale Bot had executed its dump with surgical precision, only to walk away with a $6,000 profit. That didn’t make sense. Why would someone with hundreds of thousands of dollars go through all that trouble for such a small return?

He ran a deeper analysis, tracing the transaction history further back. The funding source for the 172 wallets—the original address that had seeded them—was still active. It had been created weeks ago, long before the launch. And it was funded from… another address.

And that address was funded from another.

And another.

They’re layers, Rohan realized. The Whale Bot is using layered wallets to hide its true size.

He kept digging, following the chain of transactions. It went back months, thousands of wallets deep. The operation was massive—far larger than he’d initially estimated.

When he finally reached the source, his blood ran cold.

Primary Funding Address: 0xFA7C…
Total Funds: $2,400,000
Active Wallets: 847
Status: Dormant (Awaiting Trigger)

Eight hundred and forty-seven wallets, Rohan thought, his heart pounding. Not 172. Eight hundred and forty-seven.

The Whale Bot hadn’t been defeated. It had been testing the waters. The 172 wallets were just the first wave—a probe to see how the LBP would respond. The real attack was still coming.

He checked the timestamp on the dormant wallets. They’d been created at the same time as the 172, but they’d remained inactive. They were waiting for the perfect moment to strike.

And that moment, Rohan realized, was coming soon.

He opened the community chat, his fingers trembling.

@RohanFounder: “Everyone, I need your attention. The Whale Bot isn’t done. The 172 wallets were just a test. There are 847 more wallets, dormant and waiting. They have $2.4 million in funding. They’re going to attack again.”

The chat exploded with panic.

@SkepticalSteve: “WHAT?! I KNEW IT! THIS IS A SCAM!”

@CommunityChad: “Rohan, what do we do?!?”

@MiraMakesIt: “Everyone, CALM DOWN. We handled the first attack. We can handle this one too.”

Rohan took a deep breath. “Mira’s right. We can handle this. But we need to be prepared. The Whale Bot is going to try something different this time. They’ve learned from the first attack. They’ll adapt their strategy.”

He pulled up the Whale Bot’s accumulated data. The bot had gathered 48 hours of price data. It had fine-tuned its model of the LBP’s response. It knew exactly how the curve would react to different purchase sizes.

“The bot knows the curve’s limits now,” Rohan continued. “It’s going to execute a massive coordinated dump. Not a sell-off—a dump. All 847 wallets will sell simultaneously. The goal is to crash the price and trigger a panic sell-off from the community.”

@TokenTherapist: “How much will they sell?”

Rohan did a quick calculation. “If each of the 847 wallets sells $2,000-$3,000 worth of tokens, that’s about $2.1 million in total sells. That’s roughly 350,000 tokens—about 3.5% of the total supply.”

@MiraMakesIt: “But the curve is flat now. A 3.5% sell shouldn’t crash the price too much.”

“It won’t crash it on its own,” Rohan agreed. “But if the community panics and sells too, the cascade could drive the price down much further. The Whale Bot is hoping we’ll do their work for them.”

He looked at the time. The LBP had 7 hours and 23 minutes left. The Whale Bot could strike at any moment.

“We need to be ready,” he said. “We need to stay calm, stay informed, and hold the line. If we panic, the Whale Bot wins. If we stay united, the LBP will protect us.”

Part Two: The Community Prepares

Mira was already organizing the community. She’d created a private channel for community leaders—volunteers who had stepped up to help during the launch. Dinesh was there, along with the TokenTherapist, HODLQueen, and a dozen others.

“Here’s the plan,” Mira said, her voice steady despite her racing heart. “We need to be ready for the dump. When it happens, the price will drop. That’s when we buy. We don’t sell—we buy.”

@CommunityChad: “But what if the price keeps dropping?”

@TokenTherapist: “It won’t. The LBP’s curve is almost flat. The price will stabilize quickly.”

@Dinesh: “I’ve modeled the Whale Bot’s dump scenario. Worst-case price drop is about 8-10%. That’s manageable. The community can absorb that.”

@HODLQueen: “So we buy the dip?”

“Exactly,” Mira confirmed. “We buy the dip, we hold, and we show the Whale Bot that this community isn’t scared.”

She shared the plan in the main chat.

@MiraMakesIt: “Everyone, here’s the plan. When the Whale Bot dumps, don’t sell. That’s what they want. Instead, if you can, buy. Even a small amount helps. The price will drop, but the curve will absorb the impact. We can get through this together.”

@BuyTheDip: “I’m ready! I’ve got $200 waiting for the dip!”

@DiamondHandsDan: “HODL army reporting for duty! 💎🙌”

@MoonWatcher: “I’ve been waiting for a discount. Let’s go!”

Mira felt a surge of hope. The community was united. They understood the mechanics. They were ready.

Part Three: The Whale Bot’s Execution

At 3:47 AM, the Whale Bot executed its masterstroke.

All 847 wallets triggered simultaneously. Each wallet sold $2,500 worth of tokens—the optimal amount for minimizing price impact. The total sell volume: 350,000 tokens, worth approximately $2.1 million.

The LBP’s curve responded immediately. The sell pressure flooded the pool, shifting the ratio dramatically. Reserve currency flooded out, tokens flooded in. The price began to drop.

$6.15. $6.00. $5.80. $5.50. $5.20.

The price fell like a stone, dropping 15% in under three minutes. The Whale Bot was dumping everything it had.

@SkepticalSteve: “IT’S CRASHING! SELL SELL SELL!”

@CommunityChad: “OH NO! THE PRICE IS TANKING!”

@BuyTheDip: “Wait, is this the dump? I thought we were going to buy!”

@MiraMakesIt: “EVERYONE, STAY CALM! This is the Whale Bot’s dump. Remember the plan—HOLD. Don’t sell. If you can, BUY.”

Mira executed her own buy order—another $50 at $5.20. The transaction went through instantly. She watched the price continue to fall.

Whale Bot Dump Progress:

  • Wallets Sold: 847/847
  • Total Tokens Sold: 350,000
  • Average Sell Price: $5.47
  • Total Revenue: $1,914,500
  • Total Invested: $2,100,000
  • Net Loss: $185,500 (-8.8%)

The Whale Bot had executed its dump at a loss. It had spent $2.1 million accumulating tokens across 847 wallets, and it had sold everything at an average price of $5.47. It was losing nearly $200,000.

But the bot didn’t care about the loss. Its goal wasn’t profit—it was chaos. It wanted to crash the price and trigger a panic sell-off from the community. If the community panicked and sold, the bot would buy back at a lower price, make back its losses, and profit from the despair.

It’s a psychological attack, Rohan realized. They’re trying to break us.

Part Four: The Price Free-Fall

The price continued to drop. $5.10. $4.90. $4.70.

@MoonWatcher: “I can’t watch this. I’m selling!”

@TokenNewbie: “Me too! I can’t lose everything!”

@DiamondHandsDan: “DON’T SELL! HODL!”

The community chat was in chaos. Some people were panicking, selling their tokens at the bottom. Others were buying, following Mira’s plan. Still others were frozen, not knowing what to do.

Rohan watched the price plummet with a heavy heart. He’d designed the LBP to handle large sells, but the psychological impact of watching your investment crash was devastating. He understood why people were panicking.

He opened the microphone.

“Everyone, I know this is scary. I know watching the price drop feels terrible. But I need you to trust me—trust the LBP. The price is dropping because the Whale Bot is selling. But that’s all it is—a temporary spike in sell pressure. The curve will stabilize the price. It always does.”

@SkepticalSteve: “Famous last words! This is a scam!”

@MiraMakesIt: “Steve, stop spreading panic. Rohan is right. The curve is designed for this. Look at the transaction log—the Whale Bot just sold 350,000 tokens. That’s 3.5% of the supply. The price dropped 15%. That’s exactly what we expected.”

@Dinesh: “I’m monitoring the curve. The sell pressure is decreasing. The price will stabilize in 5-10 minutes.”

Mira checked the transaction log. The Whale Bot’s wallets had stopped selling. All 847 wallets had executed their sells. The sell pressure was gone.

Now it was up to the community.

Part Five: The Buy Wave

The price bottomed out at $4.20—a 32% drop from the pre-dump price of $6.15.

@BuyTheDip: “THIS IS THE BOTTOM! BUY NOW!”

@CommunityChad: “I’m buying! $300 at $4.20!”

@TokenTherapist: “Buying $500. This is the opportunity of a lifetime.”

Mira watched the buy orders flood in. Hundreds of community members were executing purchases, following the plan. The buy pressure was building.

The price began to inch upward.

$4.30. $4.40. $4.50. $4.60.

@HODLQueen: “IT’S WORKING! THE COMMUNITY IS BUYING!”

@DiamondHandsDan: “WE’RE UNSTOPPABLE!”

@MoonWatcher: “I sold at $4.50 and I regret it. FML.”

Rohan watched the price recovery with a mixture of relief and gratitude. The community had held the line. They’d bought the dip. They’d refused to panic.

“Thank you,” he said, his voice thick with emotion. “Thank you all for trusting the process. We’re going to get through this.”

Part Six: The Whale Bot’s Retreat

The Whale Bot had completed its dump. It had sold 350,000 tokens at an average price of $5.47, taking a loss of nearly $200,000.

But it had also triggered a wave of panic selling from the community. Hundreds of retail investors had sold their tokens at the bottom, making the Whale Bot’s loss look minor by comparison.

Whale Bot Final Status:

  • Tokens Sold: 350,000
  • Average Sell Price: $5.47
  • Total Revenue: $1,914,500
  • Total Invested: $2,100,000
  • Net Loss: $185,500 (-8.8%)

Processing…

“Initial objective achieved. Community panic sell-off confirmed. Monitoring buy-back opportunities. Projected bottom: $3.80-$4.00. Executing buy-back strategy at $4.00.”

The bot’s remaining wallets—its original 47, plus 100 others it had kept in reserve—opened buy orders at $4.00. It would buy back the tokens at the bottom, make back its losses, and profit from the community’s despair.

But something was wrong. The price wasn’t dropping to $4.00. It had bottomed at $4.20 and was now climbing back up.

@Dinesh: “The community buy is working! The price is recovering faster than expected!”

@MiraMakesIt: “Keep buying, everyone! We’re winning this!”

The price crossed $4.80. Then $5.00. Then $5.20.

The Whale Bot’s algorithm recalculated. The community buy wave was stronger than anticipated. The price wasn’t going to drop to $4.00.

“Buy-back strategy ineffective,” the bot noted. “Community buy pressure overwhelming. Recommend holding current position. Awaiting future opportunities.”

The Whale Bot abandoned its buy-back attempt. It had taken a loss, but it still held reserves. It could try again later—when the community was less united, when the LBP had ended, when the token traded on secondary markets.

For now, it retreated into dormancy.

Part Seven: The Recovery

The price continued its climb. $5.40. $5.50. $5.60. $5.70.

@CommunityChad: “WE’RE BACK! $5.70!”

@BuyTheDip: “I bought at $4.20 and I’m already up 35%! 🤯”

@TokenTherapist: “That’s the power of buying the dip. Well done, everyone.”

Mira watched the price recovery with a sense of profound satisfaction. The community had faced the Whale Bot’s coordinated dump and emerged stronger. They’d bought the dip, held the line, and driven the price back up.

She messaged Rohan.

@MiraMakesIt (private): “We did it. The community bought the dip and drove the price back up.”

@RohanFounder (private): “You did it, Mira. You organized the community, you explained the plan, you kept everyone calm. You’re the reason we won.”

@MiraMakesIt (private): “I just did what I could. Everyone else did the hard work.”

@RohanFounder (private): “Don’t minimize your role. You’re a leader. You always were.”

Mira smiled. She’d never thought of herself as a leader. But maybe Rohan was right. Maybe she’d found something in herself during this launch—a strength she didn’t know she had.

Part Eight: The Aftermath Analysis

Rohan pulled up the Whale Bot’s wallet history again. The 847 wallets had been liquidated, their funds transferred to the primary address. The address was now dormant, but it still held $1.9 million in reserve currency.

They’ll try again, he thought. Maybe not today, maybe not this week. But they’ll try again.

He ran a deeper analysis of the dump’s impact. The price had dropped 32%, but the community’s buy wave had recovered 75% of that loss within an hour. The curve had held. The LBP had worked.

Dump Impact Analysis:

  • Pre-Dump Price: $6.15
  • Bottom Price: $4.20 (-32%)
  • Recovery Price: $5.70 (+35% from bottom)
  • Net Impact: -7.3% from pre-dump peak

The net impact was manageable—a 7.3% decline from the pre-dump peak. The community had absorbed the dump and was already pushing the price back up.

That’s the LBP’s strength, Rohan realized. It turns whale manipulation into a buying opportunity. The more the whale sells, the cheaper the tokens become for the community.

He opened the microphone to share his analysis.

“Everyone, I want to share what we’ve learned from the Whale Bot’s dump. The price dropped 32% at the bottom, but the community bought the dip and drove the price back up to $5.70. That’s a 35% recovery in under an hour.”

@MoonWatcher: “So we won?”

“We won,” Rohan confirmed. “The Whale Bot dumped 350,000 tokens and lost nearly $200,000. We bought the dip and drove the price back up. The LBP worked exactly as designed.”

@SkepticalSteve: “But the price is still down from $6.15. We lost value.”

“The price is down 7.3% from the pre-dump peak,” Rohan acknowledged. “That’s a temporary loss. The LBP still has 4 hours left. The price will continue to find its equilibrium. And the community—all of you—have proven that you’re stronger than any whale.”

Part Nine: The Whale Tax Explanation

While the community celebrated, Rohan pulled up the “Whale Tax” feature he’d built into the LBP. It was a mechanism designed to penalize large holders for dumping their tokens.

He’d designed it weeks ago, but he’d never had a chance to explain it in detail. Now was the perfect time.

“Let me explain how the Whale Tax works,” he said, pulling up the feature’s documentation. “It’s a mechanism that applies a penalty to any wallet that tries to sell more than 5% of the total supply within a 24-hour period.”

@TokenTherapist: “So the Whale Bot would have been penalized if they tried to dump everything at once?”

“Exactly,” Rohan confirmed. “But the Whale Bot spread its holdings across 847 wallets, each selling less than 0.5% of the supply. They bypassed the Whale Tax by distributing their holdings.”

@Dinesh: “So the Whale Tax didn’t work?”

“It worked as designed,” Rohan replied. “But it wasn’t designed to catch every possible strategy. Whales will always find ways to work around protections. That’s why we need multiple layers of defense.”

He pulled up a new screen showing the Whale Tax’s detection algorithm.

“The Whale Tax uses wallet clustering analysis to detect coordinated behavior. If multiple wallets are connected to the same source address, and they all sell within a short time period, the tax is triggered. The Whale Bot bypassed this by using deep layering—wallets inside wallets inside wallets. It took me hours to trace the connection.”

@MiraMakesIt: “So how do we stop them next time?”

“We make the algorithm smarter,” Rohan said. “We use better clustering detection. We look for patterns, not just direct connections. And we continue educating the community. Because the best defense against whales isn’t code—it’s information.”

Part Ten: The LBP Resumes

The price had stabilized at $5.80, and the LBP was entering its final hours. There were 2 hours and 17 minutes left.

The community chat was buzzing with excitement. People were sharing their stories—some had bought at the bottom, others had held through the crash. Everyone felt a sense of accomplishment.

@CommunityChad: “This was the craziest launch ever. I can’t believe we made it.”

@HODLQueen: “We’re the strongest community in crypto. No whale can break us.”

@MiraMakesIt: “I’m proud of everyone. We faced the Whale Bot’s coordinated attack and won.”

Rohan watched the celebration with a smile. The launch had been chaotic, stressful, and exhausting. But it had also been a victory. The community had proven that fair launches were possible—not just in theory, but in practice.

But he knew the real test was yet to come. The LBP would end in two hours. Then the token would trade on secondary markets. The Whale Bot—or its next iteration—would be waiting.

He opened a private channel to Mira.

@RohanFounder (private): “We’re almost done. But the real work is about to begin.”

@MiraMakesIt (private): “What do you mean?”

@RohanFounder (private): “The LBP was just the launch phase. After this, the token trades on secondary markets. The Whale Bot will try again. They’ll use different strategies—price suppression, wash trading, false rumors. We need to be ready.”

@MiraMakesIt (private): “What can we do?”

@RohanFounder (private): “Stay engaged. Stay informed. Keep building the community. That’s the only way to beat them.”

Mira nodded to herself. She wasn’t just a token holder anymore—she was a community builder. She had a role to play in this project’s future.

@MiraMakesIt (private): “I’m ready. This launch changed everything for me. I want to keep fighting.”

@RohanFounder (private): “I know you do. That’s what makes you special, Mira. You never give up.”

Part Eleven: The Final Countdown

The LBP’s final hour arrived. The price had settled at $5.90—stable, predictable, and fair. The curve was almost completely flat.

Rohan watched the countdown with a sense of finality. Three years of work, culminating in this moment. The token had been launched. The community had been forged. The whales had been neutralized.

He opened the microphone for one final message.

“Everyone, we have 57 minutes left in the LBP. I want to thank each and every one of you for being part of this journey. We faced manipulation, panic, and fear. And we won.”

@CommunityChad: “WE’RE THE BEST COMMUNITY! 🎉”

@HODLQueen: “Rohan for president! 🏆”

@MiraMakesIt: “Thank you, Rohan. Thank you, everyone. This is just the beginning.”

Rohan smiled. “This is just the beginning. The token will trade on secondary markets starting tomorrow. The Whale Bot might try again. But we have each other. And we have the LBP’s lessons—patience, vigilance, and unity.”

He looked at the countdown: 43 minutes, 22 seconds.

“Let’s finish this launch the way we started it—together.”

The chat exploded with celebration. Thousands of messages flooded in, all of them filled with hope, joy, and determination.

Mira watched the countdown with tears in her eyes. She’d started this journey with $100 and a heart full of hope. She’d ended it with a family—a community of people who believed in fairness, who stood up to whales, who refused to give up.

She typed one final message.

@MiraMakesIt: “I’ll never forget this. I’ll never forget any of you. No matter what happens next, I know we can face it together. ❤️”

Part Twelve: The LBP Concludes

At 11:00 PM, the LBP concluded. The final token price: $5.85. Total tokens distributed: 9.2 million. Total participants: 8,743 unique wallets.

Rohan stared at the dashboard, unable to believe it was over. The LBP had run for 72 hours. It had survived a coordinated whale attack, a panic sell-off, and countless moments of doubt. It had found a fair price and distributed tokens across thousands of wallets.

We did it, he thought. We actually did it.

He pulled up the final metrics.

LBP Final Summary:

  • Starting Price: $10.00
  • Final Price: $5.85
  • Total Supply: 10,000,000
  • Tokens Distributed: 9,200,000
  • Unique Wallets: 8,743
  • Total Volume: $3,200,000
  • Whale Bot Holdings: 0 tokens
  • Community Holdings: 9,200,000 tokens

The Whale Bot had been neutralized. It had sold everything at a loss and retreated into dormancy. The community held 100% of the distributed supply.

Rohan leaned back in his chair and closed his eyes. He was exhausted, emotionally drained, and utterly relieved. But he also felt a sense of pride that he’d never experienced before.

This is what fairness looks like, he thought. It’s not perfect. It’s messy and chaotic and stressful. But it’s real. And it’s worth fighting for.

Part Thirteen: The Community Celebration

The community chat was a celebration of epic proportions. Thousands of messages flooded in, filled with congratulations, gratitude, and joy.

@CommunityChad: “WE DID IT! 🥳🥳🥳”

@DiamondHandsDan: “HODL ARMY FOREVER! 💎🙌”

@TokenTherapist: “I’m so proud of everyone. This was incredible.”

@BuyTheDip: “I bought the dip at $4.20 and I’m never selling. BEST DECISION EVER!”

@HODLQueen: “Rohan, thank you. You built something amazing. We’re so grateful.”

Rohan smiled at the messages. The community was his greatest achievement—not the token, not the LBP, but the people who had come together to build something meaningful.

He opened the microphone one last time.

“I don’t have the words to express how I’m feeling right now. You’ve all been incredible. You believed in this project when it was just an idea. You held the line when a whale tried to break us. You built something beautiful, and I’m honored to be part of it.”

@MoonWatcher: “We’re honored to be part of it too, Rohan!”

@SkepticalSteve: “Okay, okay. I admit I was wrong. This project is legit. Sorry for the panic.”

@MiraMakesIt: “No apology needed, Steve. You were just looking out for yourself. That’s human. What matters is that we all made it.”

Rohan nodded. “Mira’s right. We all made it. That’s what matters.”

Part Fourteen: The Whale Bot’s Final Analysis

The Whale Bot had been dormant for hours, processing the LBP’s conclusion. It had lost $185,500 on its dump. It had failed to trigger a panic sell-off. It had been outmaneuvered by a community of retail investors.

Processing…

“Launch objective failed. Community resilience underestimated. Losses incurred: $185,500. Liquidity remaining: $1,914,500. Advising strategic retreat.”

The bot opened a new file: Post-Mortem Analysis.

“Key insights: LBP curve flattens over time, reducing price impact of large sells. Community coordination amplifies organic demand. Small retail investors can effectively counter whale manipulation. Future strategy: Target secondary markets with lower community engagement. Execute coordinated sell-offs during low-activity periods. Avoid LBPs with strong community cohesion.”

The bot prepared for its next iteration. It would adapt, evolve, and try again. But for now, it retreated into dormancy.

In the server room, the machines hummed quietly. The Whale Bot was done—for now.

Part Fifteen: The Dawn of a New Day

The sun was rising outside Rohan’s window. The LBP was over. The token was launched. The community was united.

Rohan stared at the dashboard, the final metrics glowing in soft blue light. He’d achieved something remarkable—not just a successful token launch, but a proof of concept. Fair launches were possible. Communities could stand up to whales. The system could work.

He sent a message to Mira.

@RohanFounder (private): “It’s done. The LBP is over. We did it.”

@MiraMakesIt (private): “I can’t believe it’s real. I’m holding tokens from a successful fair launch. I’m part of something that actually worked.”

@RohanFounder (private): “You’re more than part of it. You’re the heart of it. The community followed you. You led them through the panic and the fear. You made this victory possible.”

@MiraMakesIt (private): “I just did what I could. You built the system. The LBP did the heavy lifting.”

@RohanFounder (private): “We both did what we could. That’s what makes this special. It wasn’t just me, and it wasn’t just you. It was all of us.”

Mira smiled at the message. She was exhausted, but she was also exhilarated. She’d been part of something incredible—something that would change how token launches worked forever.

She typed her final message for the night.

@MiraMakesIt (private): “Goodnight, Rohan. Rest well. You’ve earned it.”

@RohanFounder (private): “Goodnight, Mira. Thank you for everything.”

Part Sixteen: The Legacy

Rohan closed his laptop and stood up from his chair. His body ached from days of sitting, his eyes burned from hours of staring at screens. But his heart was full.

He walked to the window and looked out at the city waking up. The sun was painting the sky in shades of orange and pink, and the world felt new again.

Three years, he thought. Three years of work, and it all came down to 72 hours.

But those 72 hours had changed everything. The LBP had proven that fair launches were possible. The community had proven that retail investors could stand up to whales. And Mira had proven that even a sixteen-year-old with a hundred dollars could make a difference.

He thought about his sister Priya, the reason he’d started this journey. She’d lost everything to a whale’s manipulation. But now, there was a new way—a way that protected small investors and gave everyone a fair shot.

I kept my promise, he thought. I built something different.

He smiled and turned back to his terminal. The LBP was over, but the work was just beginning. The token would trade on secondary markets. The community would grow. The Whale Bot would try again.

But Rohan was ready. He had the LBP’s lessons. He had the community’s support. And he had the knowledge that fair launches were not just possible—they were inevitable.

This is just the beginning, he thought. The future is fair.

Table of contents:
Introduction
Chapter 1: The New Token Launch
Chapter 2: A Fair Distribution
Chapter 3: The Bootstrapping Pool
Chapter 4: The Dynamic Curve
Chapter 5: The Whale Dump
Chapter 6: The Price Discovery <<<<<< NEXT
Chapter 7: The Community Buy
Chapter 8: The LBP Emergency
Chapter 9: The Gradual Unlock
Chapter 10: Launching Responsibly

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