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Allora: The Biggest Deception of 2025 - How a Promising Project Betrayed Its Own Community
Let’s start with the basics. @AlloraNetwork @AlloraLabsHQ @AlloraFND didn’t just make a mistake - they betrayed the very community that built and supported them.
They didn’t reward the people who ran their network, tested it, and helped it grow. They gave *nothing* to those who made Allora possible.
The Worker and EVM Points Era
There were two official points programs in Allora:
Worker Points (for node operators) and EVM Points (for on-chain activities, including PancakeSwap, where users actually spent real money).
From the start, the team themselves - moderators, developers, and even official documentation - clearly said that these programs were incentivized.
It’s easy to verify: just search “incentivized” in their Discord. You’ll find dozens of messages confirming it.
But when it came time for the rewards?
Nothing. Not a single airdrop for those who spent months, and in some cases over a year, running their nodes and contributing to the network.
A year ago, a community member scraped the leaderboard - it had 142,000 wallets.
Today, if you parse the same leaderboard, you’ll find only 29,000 wallets and they received only boost! No allocation to those who helped with allora growth.
Right before tokenomics were announced, they quietly deleted over 100,000 users - keeping only those with more than 15.5 points.
When asked why, they said nothing.
The @roshpatel paradox
Rosh, one of the most visible team members, once said:
“So by you saying you have 12 points, it’s likely that your model did not contribute to the network’s collective intelligence.”
But in the same breath, he also admitted:
“12 points were retroactively rewarded to every registered worker node, irrespective of quality.”
So everyone got 12 points “just because”, and now Prime eligibility starts from 10 worker points.
Meaning - those who supposedly “didn’t contribute” still qualify for Prime tiers.
It’s pure contradiction.
Allora Prime - A Paywall in Disguise
When Allora announced Allora Prime, I actually thought it was a smart idea - a way to let people stake their rewards and earn more over time.
But I was wrong.
Allora Prime isn’t a reward system. It’s a paywall.
Instead of receiving tokens for their work, community members are now being asked to *buy* ALLO from the market and *stake it for 9 months* — just for a “chance” to earn something back from a 2.5% pool.
Here’s what their own infographic shows:
* Tier 3: 10+ worker points → 10,000 ALLO minimum stake (~$6,000)
* Tier 2: 700+ worker points → 100,000 ALLO (~$56,000)
* Tier 1: 3000+ worker points → 1,000,000 ALLO (~$560,000)
So let’s get this straight - a regular guy who ran nodes in 2024 has to now buy $6,000 worth of tokens and lock them for nine months to *hope* for a reward?
That’s absurd.
It’s clear now: Allora Prime exists only to support token price, not to reward contributors.
The $NICK Token Scam
Let’s talk about the elephant in the room - the $NICK token.
During the meme coin hype, Allora jumped in too, launching their own “fun” token named after their CEO, Nick.
They even made Discord roles for it:
> “We’ve been watching, we’ve been loving the vibe of the NICK community.
> That’s why we’re dropping these new roles:
> @Nick OG for the day-one NICKtardios | 35K $NICK
> @Nick Whale for the NICK heavyweights | 5M $NICK.”
It was meant to be funny and community-driven.
Now the $NICK token’s FDV is $56,000.
People lost millions.
The team can deny their connection to $NICK all they want - but you can still earn the Nick roles *today* by buying the token.
Meanwhile, when users buy $NICK, developer wallets keep selling.
I experienced this personally - I bought the token, lost money, and watched the dev wallets dump it right after.
And here comes the most insulting part:
Nick OG and Nick Whale roles were added to the Prime boost list.
So after losing thousands of dollars on $NICK, these same people are now told to buy $ALLO and stake it for nine months.
It’s like saying:
“Hey idiot, you lost money before? Lose it again - this time, buy our new token for $50,000.”
It’s pure madness.
After the backlash, someone named “zaddddddy” suddenly appeared in Discord (a random staff member with 58 total messages, none of them meaningful) and said:
“Yes, this is correct - there is no minimum stake amount required for those who received Prime tiers through the portal.”
So first they make a fancy chart with minimum stakes up to $560k, and then they pretend it was “misunderstood.”
No official update. No correction. Just confusion and silence.
Airdrop Reality
Based on the data from the first leaderboard (thanks to @chtototamprocryp (crypto telegram channel)for sharing the parsed data), out of 141,000 participants, only 176 wallets received any airdrop.
[LIVE] Processed: 78,747 / 151,625
With drop: 66
Empty: 78,681
Total airdrop: 347,756 ALLO
That’s less than 0.1% of contributors.
Meanwhile, 9.3% of the total supply (the “Community Allocation”) remains untouched.
It’s clear that the majority of the real contributors - workers, testers, builders - were completely ignored.
Team and Red Flags
Shortly before the mainnet, several key team members left the project quietly:
Archita, Emi, Kevin (Co-Founder), Too_Fly, Kush Dave, and others.
No announcements. No transparency. Just vanished.
Whenever people leave right before a mainnet launch, it’s a bad sign.
I’ve seen it before - it usually means they don’t want their names tied to what’s about to happen.
The Final Hypocrisy
And the cherry on top - just days before the token checker went live, CEO @nickemmons proudly tweeted about buying a new house in New York.
The timing couldn’t be more ironic.
The community that trusted and built Allora gets nothing, and the CEO celebrates a luxury purchase.
How can you even post that after betraying thousands of people?
The “Random” Distribution Scandal
Even more absurdly, Allora’s CEO Nick publicly admitted that the point-based airdrop distribution was random.
In his own words:
“Random actually is fair.”
“If every single wallet got distribution, everyone would get dust.”
So why did they even bother creating a leaderboard? Thousands of people competed for months to climb in rankings, believing their hard work and contribution would matter — only to find out it was completely random.
Now, chaos has erupted in the official Discord. The CEO himself is asking users to DM their wallets so he can “look into it” and “send allocations” manually — apparently to calm the most frustrated members.
It’s a total circus.
Conclusion - The Community Deserves Better
This isn’t just my story. I’m writing this on behalf of the entire Allora community.
We believed in the project. We spent time, energy, and real money helping it grow.
Now, after all this - no rewards, no clarity, no respect.
Instead, we got contradictions, arrogance, and a system designed to make us buy tokens we should have earned.
The numbers don’t lie:
* Nick OG: 2,700 users
* Nick Whale: 50 users
* Forge: 236 users
* Yappers: 237 users
Add that up and you’ll see - they didn’t distribute 9% to the community.
They *stole it*.
And to the people who lost money on the $NICK token, they have the audacity to say:
“Hey, buy $ALLO and stake it for 9 months.”
It’s insulting. It’s dishonest. And it’s wrong.
I truly hope Allora reconsiders the disaster they’ve created.
Because if they don’t - this will go down as one of the biggest rug pulls of 2025.




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