🔵 One of the first influencers promoting FTX. Now — the main streamer on PumpFun.
But Gainzy's path is full of scandals:
🔵 Before crypto, he was a business analyst, taught chess, and worked as an engineer. In 2017, he left everything for crypto — right at the peak of the ICO boom.
🔵 Joined the Obsidian project as a dev. The project turned out to be one of the loudest rug pulls of the cycle. Even the name Cardano surfaced in the scandal.
🔵 Then I got into trading. I assembled the Gainzy Bot, which generated income through referrals. I sold it in 2018, but I didn't stop with bots.
🔵 Became one of the first ambassadors of FTX. I earned up to $50,000 a month in commissions — even Cobie (one of the most famous crypto influencers and traders) used my code.
🔵 After the collapse of FTX, I lost a large part of my capital and quickly turned from a fan into a critic.
🔵 Then there was Rollbit. There Gainzy promoted $RLB while secretly selling tokens for millions. On-chain data linked his wallets to money laundering through Rollbit itself (casino, betting, futures).
🔵 He was publicly criticized by ZachXBT. Gainzy left Rollbit and moved to Stake (casino), but the scandals continued. New cases of hidden advertising surfaced, which he denied.
🔵 Now he is one of the main faces of PumpFun. He became famous for a viral crash during the ETH crash. He launched his own meme coin.
🔵 Recently, he crashed his own token $GNZYSTRM live, selling for $169,000. Minutes later, a new wallet (created 24 hours prior) bought the dip. This wallet had only one transaction — and it brought in $400,000 in profit.
🐦 The story of Gainzy is an example of how influence, money, and manipulation intertwine in crypto.