Learn common presale scam patterns and neutral verification habits for reducing risk before interacting with token sales.
Neutral archive note: this page is educational only. It does not recommend, endorse, verify, promote, or evaluate any specific token sale. Always verify official sources and understand the risks before interacting with any crypto project, contract, wallet prompt, claim page, or payment address.
Core idea
Presale scams can use fake websites, copied token names, fake support accounts, fake bonuses, fake claim pages, or malicious wallet prompts.
Scammers often pressure users with urgency, limited spots, or unrealistic claims.
Readers should verify information through official sources and independent checks.
No single sign proves safety, so multiple checks are needed.
Practical checklist
- Avoid links from DMs.
- Verify official domain.
- Check contract or payment address.
- Be skeptical of unrealistic promises.
Common mistake
A common mistake is treating a presale page as proof of legitimacy. A polished website, a large bonus, or an active social feed does not prove that a sale is safe. Readers should check the sale terms, official links, contract or payment details, tokenomics, vesting schedule, claim process, and risk disclosures before taking any action.
How this connects to the archive
Presale knowledge connects wallet safety, tokenomics, vesting, DEX liquidity, claim mechanics, and scam prevention. Understanding these concepts helps readers interpret token sale information more carefully without relying on hype, urgency, or unsupported claims.