A company looking to compete with meme coin launchpad Pump.fun threatened its rival with a lawsuit earlier this month. Just 10 days later, the project launched a token on Pump.fun and self admittedly “rug[ged] the chart” with the founder claiming to have made $800,000.
As the new year dawned, Pump Pumpkin issued a legal notice to Pump.fun threatening to file a lawsuit seeking more than $1 billion in damages based on allegations the project was hiding how much it was charging in fees.
Badash told Decrypt Pump Pumpkin was hiring an in-house legal team to take this case on. That said, he added that the company was unsure where the lawsuit would be filed as Pump Pumpkin is based in Israel and Pump.fun is based in the UK. He said the company was hoping to reach an out-of-court settlement.
Someone is sueing pumpfun for over $1,000,000,000 due to undisclosed fees
Despite this, the threat went viral. And Badash used the attention as a platform to promote his rival platform and its two Solana tokens: PPA and PP.
In short, Pump Pumpkin intended to release a PPA token on Pump.fun which would then be swapped for PP tokens—the governance token of the project. However, the PPA launch was a mess.
Pump Pumpkin was hyping the token launch across social media, counting down the minutes to its release and starting up an X livestream. Then the token launched on Pump.fun.
Ok, 10 minutes before we are locking in to focus on the launch of $ppa See you in 10 minutes when we post the ca. Don’t buy into copycats. don't be gay. pic.twitter.com/YHa7w47hDd
Just 11 minutes after the token was created, the deployer wallet sold $3,200 worth of the token. This caused PPA to drop 92% in six seconds. Then, 14 minutes later, an additional $3,840 worth of tokens were sold and caused the PPA price to drop an extra 76%.
Despite the two big blows, the token then pumped more than over 700% in the minutes that followed. Around this same time, you can hear people cheer in the room next to Badash on the livestream.
“This is my team getting cooked from whatever the fuck is happening right now,” the founder says, smiling to the livestream that has nearly 85,000 views. Badash goes on to explain the team were struggling to buy enough of the token supply because too many people were buying it, causing the price to increase.
During this livestream, Badash shares his screen as he attempts to control the chat that is flooded with hate against the project. This included blocking the word fuck, jew, and the Palestine flag. The flag was being shared because some viewers claimed they saw the founder had joined a Telegram group called “Fuck Arabs.”
It started on a whim. Two devs, a laptop, and an idea to develop a platform for launching crypto tokens fairly, cheaply, and easily—all while minimizing the risk of scams.
The product wasn’t perfect—far from it. And after launching in January, it arguably led to more crypto scams than would have existed without it; they just looked different. But by the end of the year, the Solana meme coin launchpad Pump.fun had become undeniably the most culturally significant crypto project of the year. Maybe...
Investors claim there were also project insiders that bought the token early and sold when the price spiked. Decrypt found numerous wallets that bought the token on Pump.fun and profited thousands of dollars—such as wallet 93Fy that bought 1.75 SOL ($309) of PPA and sold it for $23,100.
As hate started to grow within the Telegram, the founder started to provoke investors.
One user claimed to have lost “all” of their money. In response, Badash called them a “poor cock” then threatened to “dump” his apparent 30% of supply if the price didn’t increase. The investor who lost money then threatens to kill Badash. But this didn’t stop the project founder from gloating about his scheme.
“I am about to rug the chart made too much money to do it again to you guys,” Badash said in the project’s Telegram group. “Just made $800k. Suck it [racial slur.]”
Image: Telegram
Badash refused to respond to Decrypt’s request for comment.
PPA dropped 93% to a market cap of $140,000 in the 10 hours following its all-time high market cap of $2.1 million.
This is before Pump Pumpkin announced that holders could exchange one PPA for one PP token, which would burn PPA in the process. In the Telegram chat, Badash claims PP does not have a contract address which is impossible. As such, people in the Telegram reported burning their PPA tokens and never receiving a PP token in return—this only intensified the scam allegations.
Dear Pump Pumpkin Family,
We’re excited to share an important step in our journey toward growth and sustainability. To streamline and strengthen our ecosystem, we are transitioning from PPA tokens to PP tokens. This swap is designed to unify our community and enhance the… pic.twitter.com/YppjQ6ecjW
Now, the project’s Telegram is flooded with angry investors that claim to have lost money with many believing there is no way back for the Pump.fun competitor. A meme coin was even created calling for Badash to be put in jail. The founder thought it was funny.
"I lost about $11,000 in this token. I really thought it was a legit project," Mohammad Muavia, COO of crypto gaming project Convival, told Decrypt. "There is no way they can rebuild its reputation and successfully launch its product now."
Solana decentralized exchange Raydium has deployed its native token launchpad, which is designed to rival the popular Pump.fun. This comes almost a month after Pump.fun deployed its own decentralized exchange, cutting ties with Raydium in the process.
LaunchLab by Raydium offers a more sophisticated token creation process, compared to Pump.fun’s simplistic approach. The new launchpad allows for deployers to toy with the token supply, how many tokens will be sold on the bonding curve, and how muc...
A desperate man commits an act of self-inflicted violence on a livestreaming site in the hopes of collecting a windfall of digital money from strangers. Sound familiar?
No, we’re not talking about outrageous exploits related to meme coin trading sensation Pump.fun. Or well, not explicitly. We’re outlining the plot of an episode in the latest season of “Black Mirror.”
The first installment of the hit Netflix sci-fi series’ latest season, which debuted Thursday, centers on a plot that appears rip...
Decentralized exchange Hyperliquid delisted perpetual futures for the Solana-based meme coin JELLYJELLY on Wednesday, describing the move as critical to ensuring its network’s integrity amid a looming liquidation crisis.
Hyperliquid uses its own high-speed blockchain, built upon the Ethereum layer-2 network Arbitrum, and the project said its networks’ validators had convened to take “decisive action,” in a post on X (formerly Twitter).
The decision came after a Hyperliquid user opened a $6 milli...