1. What is $KEMA?

First, check if $KEMA is a legitimate cryptocurrency or a fake/scam token.

Go to sites like CoinMarketCap or CoinGecko and search for $KEMA.

If it’s not listed there, it may be a scam token or at least not widely supported.

---

2. Can You Swap $KEMA?

If you can’t swap or sell it on Binance or anywhere else, it might be because:

It’s not listed on any exchange (Binance doesn’t officially support it for trading).

It might be a honeypot scam — you can buy the token but can’t sell or swap it.

There might be smart contract restrictions blocking swaps.

---

3. How Did You Get It?

Did you buy $$KERNEL

KEMA from someone directly, or connect your wallet to a site and approve a transaction?

If yes, there’s a chance it was a scam. Many scam tokens get added to wallets to bait users into connecting to fake swap sites.

---

4. What You Can Do Now:

A. Verify the Token

Use a site like BSCScan or Etherscan (depending on the chain) to check the token contract.

Use tools like Token Sniffer to scan for known scam traits.

B. DO NOT Connect Wallet to Unknown Sites

Do not approve any smart contract requests from unfamiliar DApps.

Be careful — scammers can drain your wallet if you interact with malicious contracts.

C. Try to Revoke Permissions

Use Revoke.cash to check for and revoke any permissions you gave to $KEMA or other suspicious contracts.

D. Can You Recover the Money?

Unfortunately, if it’s a scam token and you can’t swap or sell, it’s extremely hard to recover funds.

There’s no central authority that can refund crypto transactions — this is one of the dangers in DeFi and memecoins.

---

5. What to Watch Out for (Next Time):

If a coin