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Learn/How to Read Razalith Scores

How to Read Razalith Scores

5 min read

Every asset on Razalithcarries a 0–100 razalith score. It appears on the dashboard, in alerts, and in AI analysis. Understanding what it means and what it does not mean is the whole point.

What the Scale Measures

The razalith score measures how unusual an asset’s current behavior is compared exclusively to its own history. It is not a price prediction. It does not tell you whether the price will go up or down. It tells you one thing: how statistically unusual the current state is.

A score of 0 means the asset is behaving exactly like it usually does. A score near 100 means the asset is exhibiting behavior that is extremely rare for that specific coin. The score is computed from multiple independent market dimensions, all measured against that asset’s own baseline.

The Four Levels

Razalith divides the 0–100 scale into four levels. Each level means something different.

  • Low (0–25): The asset is behaving within its normal range. Nothing statistically unusual is happening. Most assets spend most of their time in this range.
  • Moderate (25–50): Some dimensions of the asset’s behavior are outside the normal range, but the signal is not strong enough to be considered significant. Worth watching, not acting on.
  • High (50–75): Multiple independent factors are flagging unusual activity. The behavior is rare for this asset. This is where things get interesting.
  • Extreme (75–100): The asset is exhibiting behavior that is among the most unusual ever recorded for that specific coin. These events trigger alerts and are added to the public Track Record.

Direction Is Separate

The razalith score and the market bias are computed independently. A score of 85 can accompany a Bullish bias, a Bearish bias, or Neutral. The score measures unusualness. The bias measures direction.

This separation is intentional. An extremely unusual event can precede a sharp move in either direction. The score flags that something notable is happening. The bias adds context about which direction the signals are leaning, but it is not a price prediction either.

Why the Same Asset Can Have Different Scores

An asset’s score changes continuously as new market data arrives. Bitcoin can sit at 12 for hours, then spike to 89 within minutes. This is normal. The score reflects the current state, not a permanent label.

Two assets with the same score are not necessarily experiencing the same thing. A score of 70 on Ethereum and a score of 70 on a low-cap altcoin mean the same thing statistically. Both are behaving unusually for themselves. The underlying market dynamics, however, can be completely different.

What a High Score Does Not Mean

This is the most important section. A high razalith score does not mean:

  • Buy signal: The score measures unusualness, not opportunity. An asset can be extremely unusual and still move against you.
  • Guaranteed move: High scores correlate with increased probability of significant price movement, but correlation is not certainty. Some extreme events resolve quietly.
  • Permanent state: Scores are updated continuously. An extreme score at 2:00 PM can be moderate by 2:15 PM.

How to Use Scores in Practice

Treat razalith scores as an early warning system, not a trading strategy. Here is a practical framework:

  • Watch the extremes: Scores of 75+ are the rarest and most significant. They are the ones that trigger alerts and enter the track record.
  • Combine with bias: An extreme score with a clear Bullish or Bearish bias is more actionable than an extreme score with Neutral bias. Still not a buy signal, but richer context.
  • Track over time: Watch how scores evolve. An asset climbing from 20 to 60 to 80 over several hours tells a different story than one that jumps straight to 90.
  • Trust the track record:Don’t take claims about accuracy at face value. Verify them against the public Track Record.

From Score to Alert

When an asset hits 75 or higher, Razalithfires an alert (email for Free users, email plus Telegram for Pro). Each alert includes the score, the bias, the current price, and a direct link to the asset’s detail panel. Every extreme alert is tracked publicly for verification.

Read the full alert system in How Crypto Anomaly Alerts Work.

Related Articles

  • What Is Crypto Anomaly Detection?
  • Self-Referential Scoring: Why It Matters
  • How Crypto Anomaly Alerts Work
  • What to Do When You Get an Alert
  • Track Record Methodology
  • Anomaly Detection vs. Technical Analysis