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Infinity Ground Climbs 46% Into Thin Air, Lands at Minus 35

By CryptoSwings·Jun 28, 2026
Infinity Ground Climbs 46% Into Thin Air, Lands at Minus 35

A Climb With No Landing Gear

Watch the tape on Infinity Ground for the first stretch of June 27, 2026 and you would have sworn the day belonged to the bulls. Green building on green. Buyers piling in. The chart pointing at the ceiling like it had somewhere to be.

It did have somewhere to be. The floor.

By the time the dust settled, the coin that started the morning looking like the day's headline winner had become its headline cautionary tale. The buyers got their altitude. They just forgot to pack a way back down.

The Setup, the Spike, the Splat

Infinity Ground, trading as AIN and parked firmly in micro-cap territory, ran 46.7 percent over the course of the day. That is a number that turns heads. On a board crammed with 53 unusual moves, it was the loudest gain on the way up.

Then the gain did what gains built on thin air tend to do.

Infinity Ground price chart

The reversal did not arrive as a polite drift back to break-even. It came as a sell-off that kept going, well past where it started, and parked the day at a 35.1 percent loss. The whole episode carried the fingerprints of a textbook pump and dump, one of five confirmed across the day. Whoever lit that 46 percent rocket was also, it seems, holding the matches.

Sentiment, for once, was watching the right runway. The read leaned narrowly bearish on AIN, and the tape agreed. Not loudly, not with conviction, but enough.

The Three Numbers That Tell It

Here is the arc in plain figures.

The climb: up 46.7 percent. That is the bait, the thing that flagged AIN as the day's biggest mover and pulled the late buyers in.

The destination: down 35.1 percent. That is where it closed, a long way south of where the chase began.

Infinity Ground move breakdown

The gap between those two is the whole story. A coin can rally 46 percent and still hand you a loss, because the only thing that ever mattered was who was selling into the noise. The chart looked like a mountain. It behaved like a trapdoor.

Elsewhere on the Board, Cooler Heads

The rest of the day split between the genuinely thrilling and the merely twitchy. Velvet ran the show on the upside, a small-cap that more than doubled to a 109 percent gain with sentiment strongly behind it the whole way, smooth as the name suggests. Kled AI did its damage fast, up 55.4 percent in about an hour and, unlike AIN, it kept the winnings. Rocket Pool got tagged in a pump and dump and slid 12.6 percent. MemeCore cooled off 7.5 percent. MiL.k dipped 4.9 percent and Jito eased 2.5 percent, both quiet. Espresso perked up a modest 3.3 percent. And τemplar finished at plus 0.4 percent, which is the chart equivalent of standing perfectly still all day.

What the Climb Was Really Selling

Two micro-caps, two completely different endings. Kled AI ran hard and held its ground. Infinity Ground ran harder and gave back everything and then some. Same starting energy, opposite outcomes, and from the chart alone in those early hours you could not have told them apart.

That is the thing this day kept quiet. Across all 53 moves, community sentiment, as logged on CryptoSwings, landed on the correct side only about 42 percent of the time, which is to say the crowd spent most of the session reading the wrong runway. They happened to get AIN right. They did not get much else.

A 46 percent gain is supposed to mean something. On June 27, for Infinity Ground, it meant exactly nothing, except a tidy exit for whoever sold it. The buyers chasing that green candle were never really buying a rally. They were buying somebody else's plane ticket out.