How verdicts work

The verdict system

Every scan collapses to one of three calls. The logic is deliberately simple so it cannot be gamed, and so you can trust it at a glance.

CLEAR no red lines tripped clean deploy history, dev holds, supply sane CAUTION soft signals present uncapped supply, alt accounts, thin history STOP rug behavior on-chain serial seller, freeze power, drained LP
the worst signal sets the call

Worst signal wins

LENS does not average its signals. A single STOP-level red line is enough to mark the whole token STOP, even if nine other checks are green. This is on purpose: a token where the dev can freeze your balance is dangerous no matter how clean the rest of the picture looks, and an averaged score would hide that one fatal flaw behind a comfortable-looking number.

The three calls

VerdictMeaningWhat to do
CLEARNo red lines tripped on-chainStill your call, but nothing here screams rug
CAUTIONSoft signals worth a closer lookRead the red lines before you size in
STOPBehavior that has rugged holdersWalk away, or treat it as a pure gamble

Why three and not a number

A raw score of 63 out of 100 tells you very little in the heat of a launch. CLEAR, CAUTION and STOP map to a decision you can actually make in the two seconds you have before a token moves. The numeric trust score is still there underneath for when you want the detail, but the verdict is what you act on.