
Seeker (SKR), the native token tied to the Solana Seeker smartphone ecosystem, exploded more than 200% within 24 hours of its airdrop distribution.
The token spiked from roughly $0.013–0.014 to an intraday high near $0.059 before settling around $0.041 at the time of writing.
On-chain data reveals the classic post-airdrop dynamic:
The missing piece? Aggressive whale buying absorbed almost the entire float being dumped.
Nansen and other trackers show a very clear accumulation:
Net result: the 182 million tokens reportedly bought by large players roughly matches (or exceeds) the amount that flowed into exchanges from airdrop recipients.
That’s why the sell-off never really gained traction.
Price action tells a controlled story rather than a chaotic pump-and-dump:
Current key levels:
Upside targets
$0.059 → recent high (break opens price discovery)
$0.080 → next psychological & prior swing area
$0.092 → measured move projection from the base
Downside risk
$0.034 → near-term support cluster
$0.020 → origin of the pre-spike consolidation zone (major breakdown target)
Large, quiet accumulation during an airdrop dump is one of the highest-conviction setups in crypto.
When whales buy the exact amount (or more) that retail is selling and the price holds or rallies, it often signals that informed money views the current range as undervalued.
Seeker’s case fits that textbook pattern perfectly.
Short-term traders are now watching whether $0.059 can flip into support.
Longer-term participants are asking whether this is the start of a multi-week base before the next leg higher.
Either way, the combination of heavy whale buying + defended technical structure has turned what could have been a classic airdrop rug into one of the strongest post-distribution performances of Q1 2026 so far.
