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I have seen too many rug pulls in crypto.
At first, I thought they were rare, but after being in the market for a few years, you realize it's almost a rite of passage for many novice investors.
A token launches, everyone panics out of FOMO, the price rises out of nowhere, and then... disappears.
The website gets taken down, Discord goes silent, and investors are left staring at zeros in their wallets.
A rug pull is basically when the project developers suddenly disappear with investors' funds.
It sounds simple, but there are several ways to do it.
The most common is draining the liquidity pool.
Imagine someone launches a token on Uniswap or PancakeSwap, pairs it with ETH or USDT, and you start buying.
The price goes up, the pool grows, it looks promising.
But without warning, the devs pull out all the liquidity they added.
The pool becomes empty, the price drops to zero, and that's it.
That’s a classic rug pull.
Then there are more technical rug pulls.
Some malicious developers embed malicious code from the start.
They can mint unlimited tokens to flood the market, or create honeypot contracts that let you buy but not sell.
I’ve seen 'verified' projects with these kinds of traps buried in the contract logic.
It’s tricky because everything looks legitimate until you try to exit.
And then there’s social rug pulls, which are almost the most effective.
The team creates hype on social media, brings in influencers, everything seems legitimate, and when enough people invest, they disappear.
No complicated code, just trust and lies.
So, how not to fall for one?
First, distrust anonymous teams.
I know anonymity is part of crypto culture, but if no one knows who the devs are, it’s very easy for them to run off with the money.
Second, look for security audits.
If the contract isn’t audited by a reputable firm, there’s risk.
Third red flag: if liquidity isn’t locked or there’s no clear timeline for unlocking, it’s suspicious.
Serious projects lock liquidity for years.
Unrealistic promises are also a warning.
If they tell you you’ll earn 1000% guaranteed, or they claim to have backing from famous investors but you can’t verify it, run away.
Use block explorers like Etherscan or SolScan to review token distribution, see if contract ownership was renounced, look for suspicious transactions.
My advice: do your own research.
Read the whitepaper, understand what the project aims to do, verify liquidity locks, look for public audits.
And if you’re on established platforms with rigorous evaluation processes, at least you have an extra layer of protection.
It doesn’t guarantee anything, but it reduces the risk.
The reality is that rug pulls are part of the game in crypto.
Especially in DeFi, where everything moves fast and new projects pop up every day.
There are teams with good intentions building real things, but there are also many opportunists.
The lack of regulation still creates space for malicious actors to take advantage.
So stay alert, be skeptical, and remember: if something sounds too good to be true, it probably is.