🚨 Always DYOR: Lessons from the PEPE Trap! 🚨
Once upon a blockchain, in the buzzing world of memecoins and moonshots, lived a young man named Jake. Jake had recently discovered the explosive world of crypto Twitter, where rocket emojis, green candles, and cartoon frogs promised untold riches overnight.
One bright morning, Jake stumbled upon a new coin: PEPE DYOR.
“Bro, this one’s going 100x EASY,” shouted a tweet from a mysterious account with 17 frog emojis in its name. The coin’s mascot—a winking, overly cheerful green coin with dollar signs in its eyes—looked too friendly to be dangerous.
Jake, eyes wide and heart racing, ignored the warnings:
“Always DYOR”
“Never invest more than you can afford to lose”
“Scams are everywhere!”
He clicked the Telegram link. It led to a group full of shady hooded figures hyping the coin and posting rocket GIFs. The devs had no faces. No project roadmap. Just hype and “soon” tweets.
Blinded by FOMO, Jake aped in—without research. Within seconds, his screen flashed green, and his phone buzzed. He grinned—until he noticed something odd.
The coin was smiling.
Literally.
On his screen, PEPE DYOR was laughing, eyes wide, as it sucked his money out of his wallet.
Jake’s smile vanished. He stared in horror as his funds disappeared faster than a rugpull on a Sunday morning. Behind the screen, the shady devs chuckled, sitting in their lair of memes and stolen dreams.
It was too late.
Moral of the story?
PEPE DYOR isn’t real. But scams are.
Even the cutest frog can be a trap. 🐸
&
🧠 Never trust anonymous devs without checking tokenomics, contract safety, and team credibility.
Stay safe out there, degens. The crypto jungle is wild, but knowledge is your armor. 💪
This is a fictional story created purely for educational purposes. No real people, projects, or coins were harmed. Stay smart. Stay skeptical. Always DYOR.