Key terms (plain English)
If you're new to crypto, these are the words you'll meet most often in the Nun Report. Read this once and the rest of the guide will click. (For the full A–Z, see the Glossary.)
The absolute basics
Token / coin A unit of a crypto project: like a share, but on a blockchain. "Buying a token" means buying some of these units, usually hoping the price goes up.
Blockchain / chain The public ledger a token lives on. The Nun Report tracks several: Solana, Ethereum, Base, BSC (BNB Chain), and Arbitrum. Each token belongs to exactly one chain.
Wallet
Your account on a blockchain: an address (a long string like 0x8a3f… or 4vJ9…)
that holds your tokens. Everything a wallet does is public, which is exactly why
the Nun Report can investigate the people behind a token.
Contract (or "CA" = Contract Address) The piece of code that is the token. It defines the rules: how many exist, whether new ones can be created, whether transfers can be blocked, etc. A token with no contract yet is just a rumour.
Money words
Market Cap (Mcap) Roughly, the total value of all the tokens combined (price × supply). A "$2M market cap" token is small; a "$2B" token is large. Bigger usually means more established.
Liquidity (Liq) The pool of money available to trade against. Low liquidity is dangerous: it means the price can swing wildly, and you may not be able to sell without crashing it. "Liquidity ≥ $1" is the minimum bar for a token to be considered Live.
Volume (24h) How much was traded in the last day. High volume means lots of activity, but be careful, because volume can be faked by bots (see Volume Authenticity).
FDV (Fully Diluted Valuation) The market cap if every token that could ever exist were in circulation. Often used interchangeably with market cap for new tokens.
The people behind a token
Deployer The wallet that created (deployed) the token's contract. This is the single most important actor: a deployer with a history of rug-pulls is a giant warning sign. The Nun Report profiles the deployer behind every token and flags repeat offenders.
Founder / team The public people or accounts (usually on X) who run the project.
Holder Any wallet that owns some of the token. "1,200 holders" means 1,200 wallets hold it. More, well-spread holders is generally healthier than a few whales owning everything.
The danger words
Rug pull ("rug") When the team suddenly pulls the liquidity or dumps their tokens, crashing the price to near-zero and leaving everyone else with worthless coins. The Nun Report flags tokens that have rugged or are showing rug warnings.
Insider bundle / cabal A group of wallets, secretly controlled by the same people, that grabbed a big chunk of the supply early, planning to dump on the retail buyers who show up later. The Nun Report specialises in detecting these.
Wash trading Fake volume: bots trading with themselves to make a token look popular and lure buyers in. Covered under Volume Authenticity.
Mint / freeze authority Powers a contract can keep: mint = the team can create new tokens out of thin air (diluting you); freeze = the team can lock your wallet so you can't sell. The Nun Report flags these as contract anomalies.
Places you'll be sent to verify
DexScreener A popular website for live price charts, liquidity, and trades. The Nun Report links you there so you can see the real market.
Block explorer (Solscan, Etherscan, Basescan, etc.) The official public record of a blockchain. Every transaction, wallet, and token can be inspected there. The Nun Report links to it so you can verify any claim yourself.
Launchpad (e.g. pump.fun, Moonshot, LetsBonk, Bags, Raydium LaunchLab) A website that makes launching a token easy. Most new small tokens come from one of these. Knowing the launchpad tells you how a token was born.
If you don't understand why a token could go up, you're the exit liquidity. The Nun Report's job is to show you the risks before you find out the hard way.