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What the New Token Check Shows You on Desktop

By BarryGuard Team · May 5, 2026 · 4 min read

The Token Check page on desktop just got a significant upgrade. When you pull up a Solana token on a wide screen you will now see four new panels alongside the risk score: a recent trades feed, a 7-day price chart with all-time high and low markers, slippage estimates at three position sizes, and a creator wallet profile. Each panel is designed to answer a specific question traders ask before entering a position.

Recent trades panel

The trades feed shows the most recent on-chain activity for the token. At a glance you can see whether the last few minutes have been dominated by buys, sells, or liquidity events.

Why does this matter? Heavy sell pressure in a short window is one of the earliest signals of a coordinated dump. If the score says “Caution” but the trades feed shows five large sells back to back with no buys, you are looking at a token under active distribution.

The feed also surfaces LP add and LP remove events. Liquidity being pulled out is not always visible in the risk score immediately, but it shows up in the trades panel in real time. A string of LP remove transactions is one of the clearest pre-rug signals available on-chain.

7-day price chart with all-time high and low

BarryGuard now displays a 7-day price chart directly on the check page. The chart is annotated with the token's all-time high and all-time low so you can see immediately where the current price sits relative to its history.

This context is critical for entry and exit decisions. A token trading at 3% of its all-time high is not necessarily cheap — it may be in freefall. Conversely, a token near its all-time high with a strong risk score and steady volume is a very different picture than the same price action on a token that has failed multiple previous pumps.

The combination of the chart and the risk score lets you judge both the on-chain fundamentals and the market trajectory without switching tabs.

Slippage estimates at $1k, $10k, and $100k

We now display estimated slippage for three standard buy sizes: $1,000, $10,000, and $100,000. These numbers are calculated against the live pool depth and give you a concrete sense of how deep the market really is.

Slippage estimates are directly useful for position sizing. If a $10,000 buy already costs 8% in slippage, that token's pool is shallow enough that any meaningful position will move the price against you. Trying to exit a large position in a thin pool amplifies losses in both directions.

The three tiers are intentional. A token that handles $1,000 smoothly but shows 20% slippage at $10,000 is telling you something specific about where the liquidity ceiling sits. That ceiling is relevant whether you are sizing a fresh entry or planning an exit from an existing bag.

Creator wallet profile

The creator panel surfaces key signals about the wallet that deployed the token. BarryGuard now shows:

  • Wallet age. How long ago was this wallet first active on-chain? A wallet created hours before the token launch is a strong rug-pull signal. Older wallets suggest an established operator with some track record.
  • Funding source. Where did the SOL used for deployment come from? Funds arriving from a mixing service or a freshly funded throwaway wallet indicate the creator is deliberately obscuring their identity.
  • Current holdings. Does the creator wallet still hold a significant share of this token? A creator sitting on a large undisclosed allocation is a classic slow-rug setup.
  • Other tokens by the same wallet. BarryGuard now lists tokens previously deployed by the same creator address. If that wallet launched three tokens that are now dead or scored in the danger range, that history matters when evaluating a new launch from the same source.
  • Creator score. A summary signal derived from the data above. A low creator score does not automatically mean the token is a scam, but it means the person who deployed it has a pattern worth examining before you commit capital.

The creator profile is one of the most requested pieces of information from traders who use BarryGuard regularly. A clean contract from a wallet with a history of failed projects is still a risk. The panel now makes that history visible in one place.

How to read all of this together

The risk score remains the primary signal. The new panels add context that helps you interpret it honestly:

  • A “Moderate” score with a creator who has multiple dead tokens behind them and a wallet that is only days old is worth more caution than the score alone suggests.
  • A “Caution” score on a token with steady buy flow, a 7-day chart holding above its all-time low, and reasonable slippage at $10,000 is a different conversation than the same score on a token bleeding down from its all-time high on a thin pool.
  • LP remove events in the trades feed during a price spike are a signal to exit, regardless of what the risk score said five minutes ago.

These panels are available now on the Token Check page on desktop. Pull up any Solana token and see what the full picture looks like.

Check a token now →