MVC Reflection Calculator
How MVC's System Really Works
MVC's 10% transaction tax (5% reflections + 5% buyback/marketing) sounds impressive on paper, but with $129.67 daily trading volume, the reality is starkly different. This calculator shows why the reflections are virtually meaningless.
Your Estimated Reflections
Daily Reflection Value
$0.00
Based on $129.67 daily volume
Tokens to Hold for $1 Daily
1,470,000,000
At current price of $0.00000034
Time to Burn 1% Supply
87 years
Critical Reality Check
With only $129.67 daily trading volume:
- It would take 87 years to burn 1% of supply
- Reflecting $1 daily requires holding 1.47 billion tokens
- Transaction fees would destroy any potential gains
This system requires massive trading volume to function, but MVC has near-zero liquidity. The reflection mechanism is designed to attract retail investors while the real supply remains unchanged.
Multiverse Capital (MVC) is a cryptocurrency that launched on December 1, 2021, with a bold promise: a deflationary token that rewards holders while burning supply with every transaction. But behind the flashy marketing and complex mechanics, what does MVC actually do? And is it more than just another low-volume token drowning in the sea of crypto projects?
How MVC Works: Tokenomics That Sound Too Good to Be True
Every time someone sends or receives MVC, a 10% tax is applied. That’s not a small fee-it’s huge by crypto standards. Here’s how it breaks down:- 5% goes to existing holders as reflections-meaning if you hold MVC, you earn more MVC just by holding it.
- 5% is split between a buyback wallet and a marketing wallet. The buyback wallet is supposed to use those funds to purchase MVC on the open market and burn it, shrinking the total supply.
- On top of that, 1.18% of every transaction is permanently burned, adding another layer of deflation.
- 7.2% of the total tax is sent to a so-called "black hole" address. This isn’t a burn address-it’s treated like a normal wallet, meaning it can still receive reflections. That’s unusual.
The idea is simple: make the token scarcer over time, reward holders, and use buybacks to push the price up. But in practice, this system relies on constant trading volume to keep the buyback engine running. If no one’s buying or selling, the buyback wallet stays empty.
Supply Numbers Don’t Add Up
MVC has a maximum supply of 1 trillion tokens. That’s a lot. But the real problem? No one agrees on how many are actually circulating.- Coinbase says 545.8 billion MVC are in circulation.
- CoinMarketCap says 930 billion.
That’s a 384 billion token difference-almost 40% of the entire supply. Which one is right? Neither can be verified. There’s no public blockchain explorer showing exactly where all the tokens are. This kind of discrepancy is a red flag. It suggests either sloppy reporting or intentional obfuscation.
With a max supply of 1 trillion, even if 930 billion are out there, that leaves 70 billion tokens unaccounted for. Where are they? Locked in team wallets? Reserved for future sales? No one’s saying.
Market Data Shows a Dead Project
Let’s talk numbers that matter: trading volume, market cap, and holders.- Market cap: $176,604 (CoinGecko) to $963,250 (CoinMarketCap)-a huge gap that shows how unreliable the data is.
- 24-hour trading volume: $0 on CoinMarketCap, $129.67 on Binance. That’s less than the cost of a coffee.
- Number of holders: 24,500. For a token with a trillion supply, that’s a tiny community.
- Price per token: around $0.00000034. You need to hold millions just to own a dollar’s worth.
Compare that to SafeMoon at its peak: over a million holders and daily volumes in the millions. MVC doesn’t come close. The trading volume is so low that a single large trade could swing the price by 20% or more. That’s not a market-it’s a sandbox.
Why Binance Listing Doesn’t Mean Much
You might see MVC listed on Binance and think, "If it’s on Binance, it must be legit." But Binance lists hundreds of low-cap tokens with almost no trading. Listing doesn’t equal trust. It just means someone paid a fee to get on the exchange.The fact that MVC’s 24-hour volume on Binance is under $130 tells you everything. There’s no real demand. No institutional interest. No liquidity. If you try to sell a large amount of MVC, you’ll likely crash the price because there aren’t enough buyers.
Is There a Whitepaper? No.
Most serious crypto projects publish a whitepaper. It explains the tech, the team, the roadmap, the risks. MVC has none. Not even a detailed blog post. The only documentation comes from third-party sites like Coinbase and CoinMarketCap-neither of which are the project’s own team.No roadmap. No team names. No GitHub activity. No Twitter updates since 2022. If a project doesn’t want you to know who’s behind it or where it’s going, that’s a major warning sign.
Who’s Holding MVC? And Why?
The top three wallets-development, marketing, and future investors-are explicitly excluded from earning reflections. That means the team and early investors get none of the rewards they’re selling to the public. That’s a bizarre design choice. Why create a token that rewards holders, then make sure the people who created it don’t benefit?It suggests the real goal isn’t to build a community-it’s to attract retail investors who think they’re getting a "passive income" token, while insiders hold onto their stash.
Is MVC a Scam?
It’s not a classic scam like a rug pull-no one has vanished with the funds. But it’s also not a functioning project. It’s a zombie token: technically alive, but completely inactive.The tokenomics look smart on paper. But in real life, they require constant trading to work. With almost no volume, the buyback system is broken. The reflections? Too small to matter when you’re holding millions of tokens just to earn a few cents.
And the psychological barrier? $0.00000034 per token is designed to make you think, "I can buy a billion of these!" But that’s just a trick. It’s the same as selling a $1 bill as "100 pennies for $1"-the value hasn’t changed.
Should You Buy MVC?
If you’re looking for a long-term investment, MVC isn’t it. There’s no development, no community, no transparency. The numbers don’t add up. The market cap is tiny. The volume is near zero. The holders are few.If you’re looking for a gamble? Maybe. But even then, there are better low-cap tokens with active teams, real use cases, and actual trading volume. MVC doesn’t offer anything unique that hasn’t been done better elsewhere.
Bottom line: MVC is a relic of the 2021 meme coin frenzy. It was launched when everyone was chasing "high yield" tokens. Now, the hype is gone. The buyers have moved on. And what’s left is a token with no future, no liquidity, and no reason to exist.
Don’t get fooled by the math. The numbers look impressive until you look closer. And when you do, you’ll see there’s nothing behind them.
Scott Sơn
December 6, 2025 AT 09:39MVC is the crypto equivalent of a ghost town with a neon sign that says 'BUY HERE'-but the store closed in 2022 and the sign's just powered by someone's old phone charger. 1 trillion tokens? Bro, I can print that on my printer at home. The reflections? Cute. I got 0.00003 MVC and earned 0.0000000004 today. Thanks, I guess. The only thing burning here is my patience.
And that 'black hole' address? More like a black hole of common sense. Why give reflections to a wallet that can't even be traced? This isn't finance, it's performance art and I'm not paying for a ticket.
Also, Binance listing? Yeah, they list a $0.12 token with $20 in volume every day. That's not validation, that's a digital flea market.
Someone needs to make a documentary called 'Zombie Tokens: How We All Got Scammed by Zeroes and Decimal Points.' I'll be the narrator.
Also, no whitepaper? Cool. I'll just read the Reddit thread instead. Oh wait-there's no thread. Because no one cares.
Bottom line: If you're holding MVC, you're not investing. You're just collecting digital dust with a fancy tax rate.
miriam gionfriddo
December 8, 2025 AT 07:42ok so i just checked my wallet and i have 2.4 billion mvc and i earned 0.000000012 mvc today?? like bro i coulda just kept my cash under my mattress and gotten more interest??
and that 7.2% going to a 'black hole'?? that's not a black hole thats a backdoor. someone is literally just sitting on 72 BILLION tokens and getting free reflections like a freeloader at a buffet. and the team gets nothing?? that makes ZERO sense unless they already sold all their tokens and are now just watching the suckers dance.
coinmarketcap says 930b in circ but coinbase says 545b?? who even runs these sites?? a bot trained on napkins??
and the price is 0.00000034?? that's not a coin its a decimal point with delusions of grandeur. i could buy 3 million mvc and still not afford a latte. why do we still play this game??
someone please tell me why this is still alive??
Nicole Parker
December 9, 2025 AT 18:23I get why people get sucked into this. The idea of passive income from holding is so appealing-especially when you're tired of working 60-hour weeks and barely making rent. The math looks beautiful on paper: burn tokens, reward holders, shrink supply. It feels like the system is working for you.
But then you look at the real numbers and it’s like watching a house of cards being blown over by a fan. No volume means no buybacks. No buybacks mean no price support. No team means no future. No whitepaper means no trust.
And honestly? The fact that the top wallets are excluded from reflections… that’s not a bug, that’s the whole design. It’s a trap wrapped in a glittery tax code. The people who built this aren’t trying to create value-they’re trying to extract it from people who believe in magic.
It’s not evil. It’s just sad. Like a carnival game where the prize is a sticker and everyone keeps playing because they think tomorrow’s their day.
I wish people would stop chasing tokens like this and start asking: 'What’s the actual utility?' Not 'How many zeroes can I stack?'
And if you’re holding MVC? You’re not rich. You’re just patient. And patience doesn’t pay bills.