all collections · daily · marketplace overlay
weekly · real (teal) vs wash (rose)
all collections · daily · marketplace overlay
weekly · real (teal) vs wash (rose)
counterparties · funders · clusters
Move packages this wallet published on-chain — what it shipped, not what it used.
This Sui package, "bougie," defines a single object type: BOUGIE, which is a dummy struct used as a type parameter for a fungible token. The `init` function is the only public/entry function and is called once upon package deployment. It creates a new fungible token (BOUGIE) with specific metadata (name, description, symbol, and an image URL) and mints a large initial supply (1,000,000 BOUGIE) to the deployer. It then transfers the TreasuryCap to a zero address (effectively burning it or making it inaccessible) and shares the CoinMetadata object publicly. This package essentially creates a new
Wallets that share a funder, were co-funded by the same personal-scale source, or land in the same behavioral cluster. A heuristic, not proof of common control.
Tinted amber on the bubble map when they appear in the expanded graph.
casualRule-based labels, conservative precision.
area + brightness = call volume; hover for detail
Where this wallet's SUI first came from, and what it seeded downstream. Observational: a CEX funder suggests a real/retail origin; a high-fanout non-CEX funder is a signal worth noting — not proof of anything.
{
"wallet": "0xa94026ce3d345040ab138c2b55e4ee3f6b7e8bc99e0992f04ba0360f63f5392b",
"n_tx": 21,
"n_successful_tx": 21,
"n_distinct_epochs": 3,
"n_distinct_sponsors": 0,
"first_seen_cp": 62630926,
"last_seen_cp": 76314611,
"first_seen_ts_ms": 1727386958625,
"last_seen_ts_ms": 1730756765264,
"total_gas_spent_mist": 1178423664,
"n_self_sponsored_tx": 21,
"n_sponsored_tx": 0,
"gas_price_p50": 750,
"gas_price_p95": 750,
"active_hours_top24": [
21,
23,
19,
16,
0,
17,
20
],
"primary_archetype": "casual",
"labels": [
"casual"
],
"label_confidence": [
0.7
],
"bot_score": 0,
"bot_signals": [],
"cex_label": null
}Top active hours by UTC. Circadian peak → likely N. America (Central–Eastern).