🚨In one of my recent posts, I indirectly blamed the PI Core Team for the introduction of 68 million tokens, as I found my wallet empty despite having migrated 812 PI.✨
🔥 However, after a thorough investigation, I realized the issue was due to my own misunderstanding. Through intensive checking, I finally discovered the truth — and though this story highlights my own oversight, I feel compelled to share it in hopes of helping others who might face a similar situation 🕳️
🚨I can now confirm that the PI Network did indeed migrate my 812 PI coins🪙. As many of you know, this has been a journey of almost six years, and naturally, over such a long period, we may not always stay fully aware of every step. When I first completed the Mainnet checklist, I confirmed a wallet address. 📌Unfortunately, I later lost the 24-word passphrase associated with that wallet. During the KYC process, I likely created a new wallet, but I never confirmed this new wallet in the Mainnet checklist. As a result, the original wallet remained linked to my account.📊
🚨At that time, since no Mainnet migration had occurred yet, I mistakenly assumed that creating a new wallet would automatically replace the previous one — but that wasn’t the case. 📍Now I understand that my migration was directed to my first, original wallet.💸
⚠️For those facing similar issues, I strongly recommend verifying whether your current wallet address matches the one linked in your Mainnet checklist📈. If they differ, try to locate the wallet address where your PI was migrated.🔥 And if you’re in an unfortunate situation like mine — having lost the passphrase of your original wallet — go to the wallet confirmation checklist, select the option to confirm a new wallet, and enter the 24-word🔥 passphrase of your newly created wallet.💸
🚨Although I lost access to my migrated PI,🪙 I remain hopeful for the future. I sincerely thank the PI 🪙Core Team for their efforts in providing PI 🪙as a real, legitimate coin — not a scam. Let’s stay patient and look forward to what lies ahead.❗