Yokai Ryujin traded like a focused position trader over the last 30 days, with activity concentrated in 7 tokens across 32 trades. The average holding time was 2,399,802 seconds, which points to slower rotation rather than fast intraday execution. This wallet was selective in breadth but still active enough to show a repeatable pattern: limited token coverage, multiple re-entries, and meaningful sizing relative to total capital deployed. The profile is closer to conviction-based swing positioning than broad experimentation.
Recent performance was weak across the board. This wallet posted -$1,433.22 in PnL on a -62.65% ROI, with $2,287.76 in total buys against $832.95 in total sells. The win rate was 0%, meaning none of the 32 trades closed as winners during the measured period. Losses were spread across all tracked names rather than being offset by a single strong performer. In practical terms, the wallet stayed active, but exits did not recover enough capital to stabilize results.
The largest drawdown came from Cv8x…, which lost -$545.07 over 2 trades. Other notable losing positions were 2W6T… at -$270.37 over 2 trades, EAEd… at -$204.07 over 4 trades, CMHn… at -$148.49 over 6 trades, and Grrf… at -$129.53 over 5 trades. AEkh… also lost -$71.00 over 2 trades. Even the best token in the period, 5qC2…, still finished at -$64.71, despite being the most traded name with 11 trades. That detail matters because it suggests repeated engagement with a token did not improve outcomes in this window.
This wallet may appeal only to copy traders specifically looking for a concentrated, longer-hold Solana wallet and who are comfortable with a recent stretch of fully negative realized results. Yokai Ryujin showed consistency in style, but not in profitability during the last 30 days. Anyone evaluating this wallet would mainly be assessing whether they want exposure to a focused position-trading approach, while recognizing that recent execution produced losses on every tracked token and no winning closes.
