Humanity looks like a dumpster fire, and I'm seeing it for the first time only because it just pumped. So here's a brutally honest review of what reads to me as a very dangerous, extremely high-risk project — the kind I wouldn't touch with someone else's money. Not financial advice, and after reviewing thousands of altcoins on my way to finding ICP, this is exactly the pattern I've learned to avoid.
A $6 billion valuation on a six-month-old coin
The token only launched around December 2025 — it's about six months old. What could a coin that new have possibly done to justify a roughly $6 billion fully diluted valuation, with something like four billion tokens of outstanding value hanging over the market? That outstanding-supply number is the thing almost nobody thinks about, and for a brand-new project it's the first red flag.
The chain doesn't justify it
Pull up the explorer and it doesn't add up either. Yes, there are tens of millions of transactions and a roughly one-second block time, but only around 16,000 addresses, and it's running on a Geth-style setup — another Ethereum copy. High transaction counts with almost no real users is a familiar tell.
The website is all narrative
The branding is genuinely slick. The copy promises "the internet's trust layer," "verification of every claim," replacing "trust and bureaucracy through cryptography," zero-knowledge proofs, "fraud-resistant, AI-proof verification," and millions of "human IDs" integrated with brands. But how do you build a trust-and-verification layer without holding user data and without putting it fully on chain? If it isn't all on chain, it's just a narrative. Zero-knowledge proofs are the same buzzword I keep seeing stand in for an actual product.
The team page is a 404
Here's the detail that ends it for me. Click "team" on the official website and you get a 404 — page not found. There's no team listed anywhere for a project supposedly worth $6 billion, and no YouTube presence either. A coin selling "trust and verification" can't be bothered to show you who's behind it. That's not a small oversight; it's the whole story.
Five minutes of research
That's really the lesson. The difference between getting ripped off and not is often five minutes of looking. I spent less than five minutes here and found a missing team page on a multi-billion-dollar "trust layer." Take the five minutes before you buy anything — it's the cheapest protection you'll ever get.
So: absolute pass for me, and obviously not financial advice. It's the same emptiness I found in my Allora review — big valuation, no team, all narrative. For more breakdowns, watch my crypto reviews playlist here.