📢 Gate Square Exclusive: #PUBLIC Creative Contest# Is Now Live!
Join Gate Launchpool Round 297 — PublicAI (PUBLIC) and share your post on Gate Square for a chance to win from a 4,000 $PUBLIC prize pool
🎨 Event Period
Aug 18, 2025, 10:00 – Aug 22, 2025, 16:00 (UTC)
📌 How to Participate
Post original content on Gate Square related to PublicAI (PUBLIC) or the ongoing Launchpool event
Content must be at least 100 words (analysis, tutorials, creative graphics, reviews, etc.)
Add hashtag: #PUBLIC Creative Contest#
Include screenshots of your Launchpool participation (e.g., staking record, reward
Bitunix analyst: VINE rebounded 12.2% but the pressure remains unresolved, focusing on 0.082 and 0.094 in the short-term, and must be wary of Whale sell pressure and the risk of speculative funds retreating.
BlockBeats news, on August 4th, the meme coin VINE rose 12.2% in the past 24 hours, currently priced at 0.07446 USD, with trading volume expanding to 214 million, an increase of over 80%. The liquidation heatmap shows that the price gained strong support in the 0.059–0.062 range and experienced short order liquidations, triggering a technical rebound. However, the liquidation pressure in the 0.082–0.094 range is evident, providing an opportunity for short-term market makers to dump. Since Musk's tweet on July 24th that stirred up AI revival for Vine, VINE briefly surged to 0.172 USD, but there was no substantial follow-up in the news, resulting in profit selling pressure and a drop below the 30-day moving average. According to on-chain data, the top ten wallets still hold 40% of the supply, and market liquidity risk has not been eliminated, while capital outflow from the Solana chain further undermines foundational confidence. Bitunix analysts suggest: although VINE may rebound in the short term, the fundamentals remain weak, and without new positive stimuli, the price may struggle to hold above 0.082. Short-term support is at 0.072–0.074, with pressure at 0.082 and 0.094. If the upward attempt fails and falls below 0.068, short-term operations should be quick in and out, guarding against sudden dumping.