A practical guide to checking official presale links and avoiding fake domains, fake claim pages, and impersonation links.

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

Official presale links should be verified from primary sources, not random messages.

Scammers can imitate domains with small spelling changes, fake subdomains, or lookalike pages.

Users should cross-check websites, social channels, documentation, and announcements.

A bookmarked official source can reduce phishing risk.

Practical checklist

  • Check domain spelling.
  • Cross-check official social channels.
  • Avoid shortened unknown links.
  • Bookmark verified links.

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.