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Jkids
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Jkids
@Jkiddds
The only thing we're allowed to do is believe that we won't regret the choice we made
Katılım Ağustos 2012
4K Takip Edilen458 Takipçiler
Jkids retweetledi
Jkids retweetledi

I support everything @nikitabier did.
The only people crying are the larpers, scammers, engagement farmers, low life’s that make this app worse. Prove me wrong.
Drop your SOL addy, like and retweet.
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Jkids retweetledi

Here’s how I turned the chaotic world of crypto Twitter into my personal ATM—by spotting scam tokens early, spreading a little FUD (fear, uncertainty, and doubt), and shorting them into oblivion. It all started innocently enough during one of those endless bear market nights when everything smelled like a rug pull waiting to happen.
I was scrolling X late one evening, dodging the usual barrage of “100x gem” calls and fake giveaway bots, when I stumbled across a shiny new token launch. The shillers were in full force: anonymous devs promising moonshots, Telegram groups pumping hopium, and influencers dropping subtle hints while quietly accumulating. But something felt off—the liquidity looked thin, the team was faceless, and the whitepaper read like it was written by a Markov chain on its third energy drink.
Instead of apeing in like everyone else, I did the opposite. I started posting thoughtful threads pointing out the red flags: “Team wallet just transferred 40% of supply to a fresh address… coincidence?” or “Why is the marketing budget bigger than the actual product roadmap?” Nothing too aggressive at first—just enough facts mixed with questions to plant seeds of doubt. The replies flooded in: some called me a hater, others thanked me for the heads-up. Engagement skyrocketed. My follower count ticked up as people retweeted the drama.
Meanwhile, I quietly opened short positions on the perpetual futures markets. These scam tokens often had listings on decentralized exchanges with decent leverage available. As my FUD threads gained traction, the price started wobbling. Panic sellers piled in, whales who were probably insiders began trimming, and the chart painted a beautiful red candle. My shorts printed nicely—nothing life-changing at first, but consistent.
I refined the playbook over dozens of these plays. Step one: Identify the hallmarks of a classic rug candidate—hidden team allocations, unlocked tokens ready to dump, hype without substance, and a community that attacks anyone asking basic questions. Crypto Twitter is full of them; just search for the latest “fair launch” that conveniently has 80% of supply in a few wallets.
Step two: Craft the FUD with surgical precision. Use public on-chain data (easy to find on explorers), compare it to similar projects that already rugged, and frame it as “just asking questions.” Bonus points if you quote the project’s own promises back at them. The goal isn’t to scream “scam” in all caps—that gets ignored or ratio’d. It’s to make holders nervous enough to sell, but not so over-the-top that exchanges flag you.
Step three: Time the short. Enter with reasonable leverage right as the narrative shifts. Watch for when the paid promoters go quiet or start deflecting. As the price dips, the FUD snowballs organically—more people join the conversation, more charts get posted with downward arrows, and suddenly the token is bleeding. Close the position on the way down for tidy profits, then move on to the next one before the cycle resets.
One memorable run involved a hyped meme token that launched with massive pre-sale allocations to “strategic partners.” I dropped a simple thread highlighting the wallet movements and asking why the “community treasury” looked suspiciously like a dev wallet. Within hours, the price dropped 35%. My short paid out handsomely while the original shillers were left explaining “it’s just a dip, buy more.”
Over time, this approach became almost mechanical. I’d scan for fresh launches with heavy promotion but weak fundamentals, deploy the FUD artillery across a few accounts for broader reach, and let market mechanics do the rest. The beauty is in the asymmetry: the upside on shorts during a panic dump can be quick and decisive, especially with the volatility these tokens exhibit.
See below for PART 2
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This is a favorite moment 420.
@fibonacki Be the only person who truly gives without much fuss
x.com/i/status/20461…
Rock3@chadOCR
/uncmode activated Uncs and $unc let's have some fun today. It's taco Tuesday..... Quote this tweet with you favorite unc moment and find a suitable meme that fits that moment #uncmode
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**Exposed: @JamesWynnReal – The Serial Scammer Who Rug-Pulled $ASSDAQ, Deleted the Evidence, and Kept Shilling**
In the volatile world of crypto Twitter (CT), few figures have fallen as hard and as publicly as @JamesWynnReal. Once celebrated for calling $PEPE at a $600K market cap and riding it to millions, the self-proclaimed “$100M leverage trader” with nearly 480,000 followers has become a textbook case of grift, rug pulls, and damage control through deletion. His latest alleged scam — the $ASSDAQ memecoin presale — perfectly encapsulates the pattern: hype, extraction, deletion, denial, and repeat.
### The $ASSDAQ Rug: Promises, Sniping, and a Quick Exit
On or around April 16, 2026, @JamesWynnReal launched $ASSDAQ, a Solana-based memecoin with zero roadmap, no liquidity plan, and nothing but a wallet address and big promises. He ran a presale, urging followers to send SOL in exchange for 50% of the supply as an airdrop. Roughly 200 wallets sent funds, raising approximately $12,400–$12,800.
What happened next was textbook rug:
- His main/dev wallet sniped over 53% of the supply early.
- The token briefly pumped to a $322K market cap.
- **Not a single presale participant received any tokens.**
- The dev wallet dumped for around $5K.
- Platform fees and side wallets allegedly extracted another ~$53K+.
- **Total haul: roughly $74K.**
The token crashed 98% to a ~$6K–$8K market cap, leaving bagholders with nothing. Then came the cleanup: @JamesWynnReal deleted *every single post* promoting $ASSDAQ. Screenshots circulating on X show the purge in real time — promotional threads, presale calls, and hype tweets vanished. A few stray replies he forgot to delete remain a
Victims were left messaging him with no reply. One user publicly stated: “I sent 20 SOL to @JamesWynnReal. But I didn’t receive a single $ASSDAQ token. Now he’s deleted all posts about that project.”
### The Pattern: Rugs, Liquidations, Begging, and “Doom Posting”
This wasn’t an isolated lapse. Multiple X users and on-chain observers describe @JamesWynnReal as a **serial rugger**. Previous projects he allegedly dumped on include $ELON, $MOONPIG, $WLON, and $BIAO. One account summed it up: “James Wynn just launches a new rug every 3 days then deletes all the tweets.”
His trading “career” tells the same story. After the $PEPE windfall (peaking at $83M unrealized), he moved into high-leverage perps on Hyperliquid. He opened massive positions — including a record $1.26B BTC long — but the market turned. Liquidations piled up: 45 in 60 days at one point, over 200 total. By April 6, 2026, Arkham Intelligence posted “JAMES WYNN: HYPERLIQUIDATED,” showing his account down to just $900 from a $100M peak.
He begged followers for donations (~$50K raised at one point) and reportedly put it straight into more 40x leveraged bets — which also vanished. Critics accuse him of photoshopping liquidation screenshots, LARPing successful calls after the fact, and doom-posting bearish market takes that conveniently aligned with his short positions (many of which also got liquidated).
Even after the $ASSDAQ wipeout, he allegedly moved on the *same day* to shill another failing token ($DUMP), using the same wallet. No apology. No explanation. Just delete, pretend it never happened, and keep the grift alive.
### Community Backlash and the “Pretend Nothing Happened” Strategy
The crypto community isn’t staying silent. Accounts like @dethective, @ReeceOnChain, @Mutuabrian_M, and @AntiRuggers have documented the rug with screenshots, wallet flows, and timelines. Calls for platform action (including tagging @nikitabier and @elonmusk) are growing louder. One viral thread labeled him a “low-life” who “rugged his community again” while begging for donations earlier
Don’t need to drop sol addy, just comment, like and retweet.
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