Through the DigiScope's lens, this SegWit address resolves as a still and luminous body — dgb1qwlf875y25qjgkf9gfdtg539uq7a8q9cm60mr7t — holding 7,303,242.12 DGB in apparent repose. Its light first reached our instruments on the 29th of October, 2024, and its most recent flicker was recorded 31 days ago, at block 23,653,450. Across 590 days of observation, only five transactions have been logged, a cadence of 0.008 per day: this is not a trader's pulse, but the slow orbital motion of something patient.
The gravitational signature is striking. Of the 23,109,693.73 DGB that have flowed inward, 19,953,526.74 DGB — the overwhelming majority — arrived from a Binance-attributed address, with a further 3,156,166.99 DGB drifting in from an unattributed SegWit counterparty. Outflows tell a simpler tale: the entire 15,806,451.61 DGB that departed traveled to a single unknown legacy address, DMtQoKsskhLWG9…, leaving the present balance behind. No known exchange claims this wallet as its own.
The behavioral fingerprint remains uncatalogued. What we can say, plainly, is that a substantial Binance withdrawal was received, a smaller sum accumulated, a large portion redirected to an unlabeled destination, and the remainder — over seven million DGB — left to rest. Whether custody, cold storage, or something yet unnamed, the address watches, and waits.
74 DGB — the overwhelming majority — arrived from a Binance-attributed address, with a further 3,156,166.