POTS Airdrop by Moonpot: What You Need to Know in 2026

  • January

    11

    2026
  • 5
POTS Airdrop by Moonpot: What You Need to Know in 2026

There is no POTS airdrop by Moonpot. Not now. Not ever, as far as any official source shows. If you’ve seen a post on Twitter, Telegram, or Reddit claiming you can claim free POTS tokens from a Moonpot airdrop, you’re being targeted by a scam.

Moonpot (POTS) is a real token on the Binance Smart Chain. Its contract address is 0x3fcca8648651e5b974dd6d3e50f61567779772a8. It used to trade as high as $22.12. Today, it’s worth about $0.0057. That’s a drop of over 99%. The trading volume? Less than $100 a day. There are no market makers. No liquidity. No real buyers. It’s a ghost town.

And yet, people still chase it. Not because it’s valuable. But because they hear whispers of an airdrop. "Free tokens!" they say. "Sign up now! Connect your wallet!"

Here’s the truth: no legitimate airdrop exists for POTS. Not on CoinMarketCap. Not on CoinGecko. Not on Moonpot’s official website or verified social channels. Not even on the project’s GitHub or Discord. Zero documentation. Zero announcements. Zero snapshot dates. Zero eligibility rules.

That’s not an oversight. That’s a red flag.

Why fake airdrops target low-value tokens like POTS

Scammers don’t go after Bitcoin or Ethereum. Too many eyes. Too much scrutiny. But POTS? It’s invisible to most. No news coverage. No institutional interest. Just a few hundred people holding it, wondering if it’ll ever bounce back.

That’s perfect for fraudsters. They know most holders are desperate. They’ve lost money. They’re hoping for a miracle. So when a post says, "POTS airdrop live - claim your 500 POTS for free!" - they click. They connect their wallet. They sign a malicious approval. And suddenly, their entire crypto balance is gone.

These scams follow the same pattern:

  1. Someone posts a fake airdrop link on social media
  2. The link leads to a cloned website that looks like Moonpot’s official page
  3. You’re asked to connect your wallet (MetaMask, Trust Wallet, etc.)
  4. You’re prompted to approve a transaction - often labeled "Claim Reward" or "Join Airdrop"
  5. That approval lets the scammer drain your wallet. No refund. No recovery.

There’s no way to verify an airdrop unless it’s announced through the project’s official channels. Moonpot hasn’t announced one. That means none exists.

How to spot a fake crypto airdrop

Here’s how to protect yourself - even if you’re not interested in POTS:

  • Check the official website - If the airdrop isn’t listed under "News," "Tokenomics," or "Community," it’s fake.
  • Look for verified social accounts - Official projects use blue checkmarks on Twitter/X and verified Discord servers. Scammers create fake profiles with similar names.
  • Never connect your wallet to unknown sites - Even if it says "View your eligibility," don’t do it. No legitimate airdrop requires wallet connection before claiming.
  • Check token contracts - If the airdrop uses a different contract than the official one (0x3fcca8648651e5b974dd6d3e50f61567779772a8), it’s a scam.
  • Search on CoinGecko or CoinMarketCap - Legit airdrops are listed under the token’s page. If it’s not there, it’s not real.

There’s a reason no major exchange - MEXC, Bitget, Binance - lists a POTS airdrop. Because it doesn’t exist. If it did, they’d be the first to announce it. They don’t risk their reputation on fake giveaways.

A child is tricked by a fox-like scammer into connecting a wallet showing floating coins.

What happened to Moonpot (POTS)?

Moonpot was pitched as a privacy-focused cryptocurrency. The idea? Anonymous, fast, low-fee transactions. But no one used it. No developers contributed. No partnerships formed. The team went quiet.

It’s not unusual. Hundreds of tokens launch with big promises. Few survive. POTS is one of the many that collapsed under its own weight. The price crash wasn’t due to market conditions. It was due to lack of demand.

Some people still hold POTS. They believe in a comeback. But without active development, community support, or exchange listings, that’s a fantasy.

And now, scammers are using that hope to steal money.

What to do if you already connected your wallet

If you signed a transaction for a "POTS airdrop," here’s what to do right now:

  1. Disconnect approvals - Go to revoke.cash (yes, this link is safe) and connect your wallet. Find any approvals for "POTS" or "Moonpot" and revoke them.
  2. Check your balance - Look at your wallet. Are your ETH, BNB, or other tokens gone? If yes, you’ve been drained.
  3. Stop using that wallet - Create a new one. Move any remaining funds. Never reuse a wallet that approved a scam transaction.
  4. Report the scam - Share the link on Twitter/X and tag @MoonpotOfficial. Warn others. Don’t let them fall for it.

There’s no way to recover stolen funds. Blockchain transactions are irreversible. The only thing you can do is prevent it from happening again.

A brave robot protects a wallet from burning scam websites with a revoke.cash shield.

Where to get real information about POTS

If you want to know the truth about Moonpot, go straight to the source - but be prepared for disappointment.

  • Official contract: 0x3fcca8648651e5b974dd6d3e50f61567779772a8 (BSC)
  • Price data: CoinMarketCap, CoinGecko, LiveCoinWatch
  • Trading volume: Under $100/day
  • Official website: No active updates since 2023
  • Twitter/X: @MoonpotProject - last post: June 2023

No airdrop. No roadmap. No team updates. No future. Just a dead token and predators waiting to pounce.

Final warning

There is no POTS airdrop. Not in 2026. Not in 2025. Not ever.

If someone tells you otherwise, they’re trying to steal from you. Not help you. Not reward you. Not give you free money. They want your crypto. Your private keys. Your trust.

Don’t click. Don’t connect. Don’t sign. Don’t believe.

Walk away.

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6 Comments

  • Valencia Adell

    Valencia Adell

    January 11, 2026 AT 20:44

    This is the exact kind of post that saves people from losing everything. I saw someone in my Discord get drained of $12k last week because they thought "POTS airdrop" was real. No one deserves to lose money to these ghost projects. If you’re reading this and you’re still holding POTS, let it go. It’s not coming back. No miracle airdrop is going to save your portfolio. Just walk away.

  • Sarbjit Nahl

    Sarbjit Nahl

    January 12, 2026 AT 07:54

    The collapse of POTS reflects the broader epistemological failure of speculative crypto culture. The belief in an airdrop is not merely a technical misconception but a metaphysical yearning for redemption through external intervention. The token’s value is zero not because of market inefficiency but because the social contract underpinning its utility has been nullified by abandonment. To chase it is to worship a phantom.

  • Paul Johnson

    Paul Johnson

    January 14, 2026 AT 03:37

    lol why are people still even talking about pots like its a thing lmao its been dead since 2022 i swear half the people on here are still holding it hoping for a miracle like its some kind of lottery ticket not a dead coin with no dev team no liquidity and no future

  • Meenakshi Singh

    Meenakshi Singh

    January 14, 2026 AT 10:53

    SCAMMERS ARE LIVING OFF HOPE 😔 People think "free tokens" means salvation... but it's just a digital mugging. I lost my entire BNB stash to one of these last year. Now I check every link twice. Even the ones that look legit. Don't be the next one. 💔🚫

  • Kelley Ramsey

    Kelley Ramsey

    January 16, 2026 AT 02:24

    Thank you so much for writing this - I really appreciate how clear and detailed it is. I’ve seen so many people asking about POTS airdrops, and I didn’t know how to explain why it was a scam without sounding harsh. This is perfect. I’m sharing it with my crypto group. Everyone needs to see this. Please keep doing this kind of work - it’s so important.

  • Michael Richardson

    Michael Richardson

    January 16, 2026 AT 22:22

    US has the dumbest crypto believers. India’s got more sense. At least they know when a coin is dead. POTS? It’s not a token. It’s a graveyard with a website.

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