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KIKI Launch Chaos: Insider Bots and Fake Tokens Sabotage Crypto Debut

KIKI Launch Chaos: Insider Bots and Fake Tokens Sabotage Crypto Debut

Published:
2025-08-13 17:35:53
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KIKI launch sabotaged with insider bots and fake tokens

Another day, another crypto launch gone sideways. The much-hyped KIKI token rollout got hijacked by insider bots and a flood of counterfeit tokens—because why let organic growth ruin a perfectly good pump-and-dump opportunity?

Behind the Scenes: How Bots Stole the Show

Sources close to the project claim automated traders scooped up over 60% of the initial supply in milliseconds, leaving retail investors clutching metaphorical bags. Meanwhile, fake KIKI tokens began circulating on decentralized exchanges faster than you can say 'rug pull.'

Damage Control Mode

The team's now scrambling to blacklist suspicious wallets—a classic case of closing the barn door after the horse has bolted. Their 'state-of-the-art' anti-sybil measures? About as effective as a screen door on a submarine.

The Takeaway

Until crypto projects start treating launch security as something more serious than an afterthought, expect more of these fiascos. But hey—at least the bots made some tidy profits before the FSA comes knocking. Assuming they ever do.

KIKI launch sabotaged with insider bots and fake tokens

The main actor behind this mess is Jay Ha. He assembled a team that included JayC, Shytoshi, Todor, Jelly, and a few others. He claimed he paid $360,000 to secure KIKI’s IP, but that number was exposed as fake.

The real seller, Bryan, said the deal was just $20K. There were no receipts. The IP was never legally transferred. The name KIKI was just a smokescreen.

Before launch, Ha leaked the ticker and schedule to Filipino and Korean KOLs. That info was used by bots and snipers to rig the launch. Over 15 fake KIKI tokens showed up on Pump.fun.

The real one had to be delayed a week. By then, the whole thing was compromised. One former team member said, “KIKI’s ticker and internal info were already out before we even pressed go.”

Ha operated under the fake name “Kokoro” to avoid responsibility. While pretending to be hands-off, he was controlling deals, wallets, and communications. Even JayC (the project’s original CEO) said, “Nobody could hold him accountable because nobody knew who he really was.”

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