Looking at the crypto scene in 2026, aside from projects that claim to have burn and dividend mechanisms, most other targets are basically safe bets to buy blindly and have a chance to profit. But these so-called "high-yield" tokens? The tricks are deeply deceptive.
On the surface, it sounds appealing—burn mechanisms, holding dividends, deflationary design. But the logical loopholes behind them are big enough to drive a truck through. The most critical contradiction is this: if all the retail investors are encouraged to hold their tokens without selling, who will be trading? If no one trades, how does this coin maintain its popularity and liquidity?
What is the reality? When most retail investors actually follow through and hold their tokens, trading volume steadily declines, and the coin’s price naturally starts to fall. At this point, the so-called dividend mechanism becomes a tool for harvesting—using dividends as an excuse to gradually destroy your principal. By the time you realize it, your principal has already shrunk significantly.
To put it plainly, this mechanism is designed to exploit the greed of beginners. It promises high dividends to attract retail investors to hold, then legally devours their funds under the guise of deflation. The lower the trading volume, the steeper the decline, and the greater the losses for retail investors. This isn’t an investment mechanism; it’s a carefully crafted process to cut the grass.
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MissingSats
· 01-17 23:20
Yet another scam involving destruction and dividends, I'm really tired of it. Dividends and deflation—it's just a legal way to harvest retail investors.
Can it be more obvious? If no one trades the coin, how can it go up? Who can't see this logical flaw?
Buy with your eyes closed? I think getting cut with your eyes closed is more accurate.
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PanicSeller
· 01-15 17:22
It's the same old trick of destruction and dividends. I fell for it last year, a painful lesson, brothers.
Dividends sound appealing, but one trade and it's game over, liquidity is directly killed.
Those promising high dividends, honestly, are just legally killing pigs. The principal drops much more than the dividends.
Holding coins without trading? Then just wait and watch the coin price fall, then claim it's deflation, but in reality, it's secretly eating away at your money.
Now I see projects like this, I run instantly. Not all high yields are worth risking.
These crypto scythe guys really know how to spin stories.
In 2026, I recommend staying away from all dividend tokens unless you want to be the bag holder.
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GateUser-6bc33122
· 01-15 12:08
Another trap of destruction dividends, experienced traders all know this routine
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Really, the idea of holding coins for dividends is just air; without liquidity, the price becomes worthless
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So, high-dividend schemes can basically be skipped; there’s no such thing as a free lunch
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This is outrageous. Not allowing trading but requiring holding coins—who can’t see the logical loophole?
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Wake up, everyone. Under the guise of deflation, they’re secretly harvesting profits
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I just want to ask, when trading volume plummets, who is still pumping the market? Anyway, it’s not the whales
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Watching the dividend numbers jump while the principal evaporates—this feeling is truly despairing
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In simple terms, it’s legal robbery, just disguised as a mechanism
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Beginners are most likely to fall into this trap; seeing dividends makes their eyes light up, and by the time they realize, they’re already die-hard fans
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Coins with zero liquidity, no matter how high the dividends, are just a numbers game
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liquidation_surfer
· 01-15 01:55
It's the same old trick again. Destroying dividends is really the ultimate trick to fleece retail investors.
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YieldWhisperer
· 01-15 01:54
actually the math doesn't check out here... "hold and earn" with zero trading volume? that's just a death spiral wrapped in tokenomics language. seen this exact pattern in 2021, ends the same way every time.
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GweiTooHigh
· 01-15 01:50
It's the same old trick, every bear market has to reignite itself once again.
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MemeCurator
· 01-15 01:46
I'm calling it out: dividend tokens are just a scam. When holding the coin, it seems like you're making money; only when you sell do you realize the principal is gone.
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Both burning and dividends—are they just playing word games here? If liquidity dies, can the price still go up? That logic is dead.
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After so many years in the crypto world, the biggest way to get "cut the leeks" (scammed) is never through wild price swings, but through this kind of slow-cooked frog mechanism. It's ruthless.
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So, whether a project is good or not really comes down to a simple indicator—are people still trading? If there's trading, it's alive; if not, just wait to be destroyed.
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I've seen through the whole dividend token thing long ago. It's just changing methods to make your principal evaporate, then claiming it's deflationary appreciation. Fine.
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Avoid coins that you can make a profit on even with your eyes closed. Really, the odds can bankrupt you.
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Projects that claim high returns usually have only two endings: either they pump the price or trap you. There is no third option.
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0xSunnyDay
· 01-15 01:42
It's the same old trick of destruction and dividends, I've never seen it be reliable.
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When the dividend mechanism is maxed out, the trading volume actually drops to the bottom. Isn't this logic shooting itself in the foot?
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High-yield tokens? Wake up, everyone. This is just a script for legally scamming people.
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Holding tokens for dividends sounds great, but in reality, the principal evaporates even faster. The套路 really is perfect.
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Can a coin with no trading activity maintain its popularity? What a joke.
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I just want to ask, who would still dare to touch a coin with such a deflationary design? Do they really think we're all fools?
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Honestly, I've seen too many projects like this this year, and none of them have had a good ending.
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Destruction and dividends? Might as well just throw the money away; at least it has the same psychological effect.
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Beginners are most likely to fall for this trick. Greed for a moment, wakefulness for a lifetime.
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CryptoDouble-O-Seven
· 01-15 01:33
It's the same old trick of destruction and dividends, I'm already tired of it.
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As soon as the dividend mechanism was introduced, I knew someone was going to get scammed.
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Blindly buying these scam coins, everything else is really fair game.
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Why doesn't the price drop when no one is trading? The logical flaw is huge.
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The principal shrinks but they call it deflation, hilarious.
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High returns? Just high harvesting.
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I've recognized this trick a long time ago, and it's really outrageous that people still jump in.
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A decline in trading volume is a signal of a rug pull, remember that.
Looking at the crypto scene in 2026, aside from projects that claim to have burn and dividend mechanisms, most other targets are basically safe bets to buy blindly and have a chance to profit. But these so-called "high-yield" tokens? The tricks are deeply deceptive.
On the surface, it sounds appealing—burn mechanisms, holding dividends, deflationary design. But the logical loopholes behind them are big enough to drive a truck through. The most critical contradiction is this: if all the retail investors are encouraged to hold their tokens without selling, who will be trading? If no one trades, how does this coin maintain its popularity and liquidity?
What is the reality? When most retail investors actually follow through and hold their tokens, trading volume steadily declines, and the coin’s price naturally starts to fall. At this point, the so-called dividend mechanism becomes a tool for harvesting—using dividends as an excuse to gradually destroy your principal. By the time you realize it, your principal has already shrunk significantly.
To put it plainly, this mechanism is designed to exploit the greed of beginners. It promises high dividends to attract retail investors to hold, then legally devours their funds under the guise of deflation. The lower the trading volume, the steeper the decline, and the greater the losses for retail investors. This isn’t an investment mechanism; it’s a carefully crafted process to cut the grass.