$SIGN is one of those setups where the surface story and the real story don’t match.

On the surface, everyone sees the same thing. Big supply ahead, April unlock, risk of dilution. So the default reaction is fear. People step back, waiting for a drop.

But when you actually watch how this thing moves day to day, it feels different.

Even when price pulls back hard, the volume doesn’t disappear. That’s rare for a project at this size. In most cases, once momentum fades, everything goes quiet. Here, activity keeps going. That usually means one thing, the token is being used, not just traded.

A lot of that flow seems tied to how the system works behind the scenes. Distributions, vesting, incentives, real processes that keep the token moving. So instead of relying only on hype, there’s a constant loop of usage pushing it forward.

Now coming to the part everyone is waiting for, the unlock.

Yes, it’s big. And yes, it can create pressure. If large holders decide to exit together, it won’t be pretty. That risk is real and should not be ignored.

But at the same time, this is where it gets interesting.

If the current level of activity holds, then the market might actually be able to absorb a good portion of that new supply. Not instantly, but over time. In that case, the unlock becomes less of a crash event and more of a stress test for the system.

And honestly, that’s what I’m watching.

Not just price. Not just headlines. But whether the usage keeps running.

Because if the engine behind $SIGN keeps moving, then this might be stronger than it looks right now.

If it slows down, then the fear everyone has been talking about probably plays out.

Simple as that.

@SignOfficial #SignDigitalSovereignInfra $SIGN