Thousands got scammed by good-looking tokens. Hereās how to catch the red flags before itās too late. We also explain how these scammers are stealing money!
Table of Contents
Introduction
Now, I want to show you something really interesting:
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This project raised 1197 BNB, which is equal to $755,000 as of March 2025.
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This project raised 238 ETH, which is equal to $473,000 in todayās value.
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And this project raised 353 BNB, which is about $222,700 as of today.
Now, all these three projects (and many others on other crypto launchpads, and even on-chain) have one thing in common:
All of them are pure rugpull or scam projects. Look at these investors, they are āscammedā:


Todayās lesson will be super straightforward, cause as you can see its name, itās about āscamā. So I wonāt waste your time with fluff or long-winded stories. Iāve seen way too many people lose money in crypto. Some lost $100. Others lost everything ā $10,000, $50,000, even more.
Most of them had no idea it was a scam until it was too late. I donāt want that to happen to you. Iāll show you how scams actually work, how people get tricked, and most importantly, how you can protect yourself from ending up in one. Youād be surprised how many tokens look good on the outside: cool websites, clean whitepapers, even verified smart contracts but they still turn out to be scams.
Iāll show you how I spotted these scams and what they did. None of them spent a single penny on marketing. Yet they still raised hundreds of thousands, even millions. There are also projects on PinkSaleās leaderboard that raised over $3 million. Same story. they were rugpulls or scams.
They didnāt advertise.
They didnāt run paid campaigns.
They used something else to raise the funds.
And once the funds came in, they just ran away with investor money.
And I can prove all of it.
I. What is a Rug Pull?
Let me explain this in the most direct way: a rug pull is when someone creates a crypto project, hypes it up, gets people to put money in, and then suddenly runs away with the funds. The project disappears, the token crashes, and people lose everything.
The name ārug pullā comes from the idea of pulling the rug out from under you – you think everythingās fine, then bam, it collapses.
Simple Example:
You see a new token project. It looks exciting. It has a cool name, flashy website, maybe even a Telegram group with thousands of users. You think, āThis could be the next big thing.ā => You buy in. A lot of people do.
Then, boom. One day, the developers take all the liquidity (thatās the pool of money used to let people buy/sell the token), and they vanish.
Your tokens? Still sitting in your wallet. But theyāre worthless now. Why? Because you canāt sell them. Thereās no money left in the project. The devs ran off with it.
Two common types of rug pulls:
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Liquidity Rug Pull
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They drain the liquidity pool.
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So no one can sell the token anymore, even if they want to.
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Letās say the pool had $1 million from investors – gone in seconds.
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Token Dump Rug Pull
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The devs hold a huge portion of the token supply.
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They wait for the price to go up as people buy in, then dump everything.
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Price crashes by 90% or more in minutes.
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š¤ Why do they happen so often?
Because:
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Crypto is unregulated in many parts of the world.
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Anyone can create a token or smart contract in a few hours.
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Many people invest without doing much research.
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FOMO (fear of missing out) drives people to jump in fast, especially when prices are rising.
II. Common Red Flags of a Rug Pull
Like I said before, this part will be super straightforward so that you can get all these red flags immediately. So Iāll show you the most common signs Iāve learned (honestly, I was scammed twice š¢)
š© Red Flag #1: Website Gone
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The first red flag is always this:
All three of the examples I show you above, youāll see their site is down. Their X accounts are gone too. Their Telegram? Either gone or locked. You canāt post. Theyāre not active.
š© Red Flag #2: Look at the Chart
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The easiest way to spot a scam project?
If it looks like this ā just a complete red chart ā thatās your signal. Thatās a rugpull. And lucky for us, blockchain has all the historical data of all the transactions.
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This is when the trading got enabled right after their fair launch or presale, and after 6 minutes you can see a few wallets sold huge amounts of these tokens. The first one was $43,000, more than $43,000. It was followed by $13,000, $3,700. And similarly it will go on and on 11,000.
=> So as you can see, it was a massive sell off which resulted in this red candle. And this is why I mentioned repeatedly that the liquidity pool should be locked for at least 1 year.
š© Red Flag #3: Anonymous or Fake Team
If you donāt know whoās behind the project, thatās your first big red flag.
Let me explain.
Most legit crypto projects have team members who show their real names, faces, and even LinkedIn profiles. You can Google them and see their past work. But if the project only gives cartoon pictures or random usernames like āCryptoKing123,ā thatās a problem.
In over 80% of rug pulls, the team was anonymous. If thereās no one to hold accountable, they can vanish, and thereās nothing you can do.
Hereās what to check:
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Do they have LinkedIn profiles?
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Can you find their interviews or YouTube videos?
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Have they worked on any known projects before?
If the answer is no or you feel like somethingās hidden, walk away.
š© Red Flag #4: Liquidity Is Not Locked
Liquidity means the pool of money that lets people trade the token – usually on a DEX like Uniswap or PancakeSwap.
If that money isnāt locked, the team can remove it anytime. Thatās the classic rug pull move.
What to check:
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Go to the tokenās info page on the DEXTools, paste the projectās contract address you wanna check, and click on this button:
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Look for the lock duration. A real project usually locks liquidity for 6 months to 1 year minimum.
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If the lock is only a few days – or missing entirely – be very careful.
In most rug pulls, the devs yank out all the liquidity and leave buyers with worthless tokens. It happens within seconds, and once itās gone, you canāt get your money back.
š© Red Flag #5: Too Much Supply Controlled by the Team
This oneās tricky but important. If the devs or insiders hold too many tokens, they can dump them on the market and crash the price. Fast.
Let me give you a real number: If the top 10 wallets (excluding the liquidity pool) hold more than 15ā20% of the total supply, thatās risky. Like this:

Hereās how to check:
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Use a free site like DexTools
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Look for āHolders.ā
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If one wallet has 30% of the tokens or more, run. Iāve seen this lead to full crashes within minutes.
Sometimes scammers split their tokens across different wallets to hide it. But tools like DexTools will still show you the top holders. Youāll see the pattern.
š© Red Flag #6: Admins Ban Users Who Ask Questions
Join the projectās Telegram or X post. Ask a basic question like:
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āIs liquidity locked?ā
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āIs the contract audited?ā
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āWhat does the team plan to release next?ā
If they ignore you or ban you right awayāthatās a rug pull tactic. Iāve seen it happen in multiple scams. Real teams answer questions, even hard ones.
Quick test: Scroll up in the group and see how many people got banned or deleted. If itās a lot, theyāre hiding something.
III. Common Questions You Ask A Lot
1. So How Did They Raise So Much?
ā None of them spent on marketing. They didn’t buy traffic. They didnāt run ads. They just used other methods ā bots, fake hype, timing ā to raise funds.
Once they had the money, they rugged, pulled liquidity, and left.
2. Why They Canāt Be Traced
You canāt trace them. Blockchain is decentralized.
Wallets are public, but thereās no identity attached. They just pull the rug and vanish. Over and over. A lot of them become millionaires just by doing this in less than a year.
3. Why Iām Telling You All This
Everything I taught in SuperAI x Crypto course was about the right way to build a project. But thereās a dark side too.
People use different techniques to scam investors, and these methods are very common. To educate you, Iāve created this short lesson. But if you want to have another course to be just dedicated to this topic.
I think itāll be purely educational. Iāll show:
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How these projects raise funds without any marketing
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How they use bots and fake wallets
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How they trigger FOMO
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How they pull liquidity
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And how they stay anonymous and get away
It will be a short course yet. I’ll cover and decode their methods step by step for educational purposes. This course will enable you to see the other side of the spectrum and understand how these actors are implemented, these wide range scam projects, and how they get away with millions of dollars in just a couple of days.
I am in no way suggesting or teaching anyone these methods. It is purely for educational purposes, so you and your loved ones don’t fall victim to these projects.
=> LET ME KNOW IF YOU WANT ME TO CREATE THIS NEW COURSE!
BONUS: What to Do If Youāve Fallen for a Rug Pull?
So⦠you got rugged. It sucks. Iāve been there too š¢ I know your first instinct is to sell whateverās left or do something fast. But stop for a second.
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First, check what exactly happened: Did the devs just dump? Did they pull liquidity? Or is the site/socials just down?
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Sometimes, itās not a full rug yet, some projects recover from panic dips or FUD. Iāve seen it before.
Go and check:
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Is liquidity removed?
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Are tokens still moving?
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Are wallets dumping?
If you see the dev wallet removing liquidity or dumping all tokens, it’s likely a rug. Now we act. If trading isnāt disabled and liquidity isnāt fully gone, you might still be able to sell your tokens.
=> Try swapping your tokens for BNB, ETH, or stablecoins like USDT/USDC.
š¢Ā Important: If you canāt sell, itās likely a honeypot rug (you can buy but never sell). Youāre stuck but donāt give up yet.
Next, Report the Scam ā Youāre Not Alone. This step wonāt get your money back immediately, but it does make a difference.
Ah, another solution, Try Claiming Losses (Itās Rare, but Possible). In 2022, I saw a small group who got rugged in a project called āMoonPortXā manage to get some funds back. But keep in mind, recovering funds is hard and often takes months.
Conclusion & Next Last Part
Alright, you mightāve lost $50 or $5,000. Iāve seen people lose $100,000+ in one rug. It hurts. But youāre still early in crypto. Itās part of the hard lessons. The important part is this: Donāt let one scam push you out of the space. Let it sharpen your instincts.
I turned my biggest rug (loss of $3,200) into a checklist thatās now helped over 150 people avoid scams. Use your experience to build your own rules.
Youāll get better. Youāll spot scams faster. And youāll make it back with smarter, safer plays. Try to remember these red flags okay.
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