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Been thinking about some of the biggest cryptocurrency collapses in history and honestly, the lessons are wild. If you're new to crypto, understanding why certain projects failed is way more valuable than chasing the next moonshot.
Let me walk through a few that really stand out. BitConnect was probably one of the most infamous - launched in 2016 and completely imploded by 2018. Classic Ponzi scheme setup. They promised these insane daily fixed returns that made zero sense mathematically. Authorities shut it down and investors got absolutely wrecked, losing millions. That's what happens when returns sound too good to be true.
Then there's OneCoin, which emerged around 2014 and was basically a global fraud operation. Here's the kicker - there was no actual blockchain. The whole thing was fabricated. The founder Ruja Ignatova is literally wanted by Interpol and disappeared. That's how sketchy this got.
Now fast forward to 2022. Terra and LUNA became the poster child for a cryptocurrency that failed spectacularly. The whole system relied on UST, this stablecoin that was supposed to maintain its peg. It didn't. Billions evaporated in days. Even with the LUNA 2.0 relaunch, the trust never really came back. That collapse shook the entire market.
Mt. Gox is another one that people forget about. The platform got hacked in 2014 and lost the equivalent of 850,000 Bitcoins. That wasn't just a token failure - it was an entire exchange collapse. The associated cryptocurrency went with it.
And then there's the DAO incident from 2016. A major smart contract hack that literally split the Ethereum network into two. Ethereum and Ethereum Classic exist because of that hack. That's how significant the failure was.
The common thread? Either unsustainable promises, fundamental technical flaws, or straight-up fraud. These aren't just random failures - they're cautionary tales about due diligence and understanding what you're actually buying into. The space has matured since then, but the reminder is still relevant.