That sounds like one of those “too good to be true” crypto giveaway messages — and 99% of the time, they are scams.

PEPE coin (and similar meme coins) can be traded like any other token, but any offer that says “follow these steps to get free tokens” is usually trying to:

Steal your wallet private keys or seed phrase.

Get you to send them crypto “for verification” and then vanish.

Trick you into connecting your wallet to a malicious smart contract.

If you’re genuinely interested in earning from PEPE, the safe approach is:

Only buy it on reputable, centralized exchanges (e.g., Binance, Coinbase) or trusted DEXs with your own wallet.

Never share your seed phrase or private key.

Treat giveaways as fake unless they come directly from official, verified project channels — and even then, double-check.

If you want, I can give you a risk/reward breakdown for PEPE so you can decide whether it’s worth trading right now instead of chasing giveaways.

Do you want me to pull PEPE’s latest market data?

#Notcoin #CryptoIn401k