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Home/Glossary/Rug Pull
Glossary · Scam Type

What Is a Rug Pull?

A cryptocurrency scam where the developers of a token or project suddenly withdraw all liquidity or abandon the project, leaving investors with worthless tokens and no way to recover their money.

Quick Definition

A cryptocurrency scam where the developers of a token or project suddenly withdraw all liquidity or abandon the project, leaving investors with worthless tokens and no way to recover their money.

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01Rug Pull explained.

A rug pull is named after the expression "pulling the rug out from under someone." In the crypto world, it describes projects that appear legitimate but are designed from the start to steal investors' money. The developers create hype, attract investment, then disappear with the funds.

There are several types of rug pulls. Liquidity pulls involve removing all funds from a decentralized exchange's liquidity pool. Sell-order exploits let developers sell but prevent investors from doing so. Dump schemes involve developers selling massive pre-mined holdings.

The DeFi (Decentralized Finance) ecosystem is particularly vulnerable because anyone can create a token and list it on decentralized exchanges without verification. The lack of regulation and the pseudonymous nature of blockchain make rug pulls difficult to prevent or prosecute.

02How it works.

01Developers create a new cryptocurrency token with an appealing concept or meme value
02They market it aggressively through social media, paid influencers, and fake endorsements
03Early investors see rapid price increases as hype builds and more people buy in
04The developers, holding large amounts of the token, suddenly sell everything or drain the liquidity pool
05The token price crashes to near zero, and investors are left holding worthless tokens

03Real-world example.

The Squid Game token (SQUID) launched in October 2021, riding the popularity of the Netflix show. It surged 23,000,000% in value before the developers drained all liquidity, stealing approximately $3.3 million. Investors couldn't sell because the smart contract was designed to only allow buying.

04How to protect yourself.

01Research the development team — anonymous or unverifiable teams are a red flag
02Check if the liquidity pool is locked (prevents developers from draining it)
03Audit the smart contract code or check for third-party audits
04Be skeptical of tokens with extreme hype but no real utility or product
05Never invest more than you can afford to lose in any cryptocurrency
Related Terms
Cryptocurrency ScamPonzi SchemeSocial Engineering
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