Security · Rug check
Owner can edit balances. Owner can rewrite any wallet's balance.
Cross-checked: GoPlus + honeypot.is live simulation
▸ Why is this risky?
What it means: The contract lets an authority rewrite the token balance in any wallet.
How scammers use it: A scammer can zero out your balance or mint themselves an unlimited amount — total control over your holdings.
What to do: Avoid entirely. Editable balances mean your tokens were never really yours.
- LP not secured (0% locked) — Liquidity can be pulled — the classic rug.
▸ Why is this risky?
What it means: The trading pool's funds don't appear to be locked or burned, so whoever controls them can pull them out.
How scammers use it: This is the classic rug: the team waits for buyers to add money, then removes all the liquidity, collapsing the price to zero.
What to do: Don't buy unless you can see proof the liquidity is locked or burned. Unverified is a real risk, not a neutral.
- Mintable supply — Owner can mint and dilute holders.
▸ Why is this risky?
What it means: The token's supply isn't fixed — an owner or authority can create new tokens at will.
How scammers use it: Scammers mint a huge new batch for themselves and sell it, diluting everyone else's holdings toward zero.
What to do: Prefer tokens where minting is revoked/renounced. If mint is active, treat any price as fragile.
- Live sell-sim inconclusive — The live simulation labels this a honeypot, but its own sell/tax/holder data and GoPlus disagree. Treat as a provider disagreement, not a confirmed honeypot.
- Top holder owns 49.9% — Notable concentration.
▸ Why is this risky?
What it means: A single non-pool wallet controls a large share of the total supply.
How scammers use it: That holder can dump their entire bag at once, crashing the price and leaving everyone else underwater.
What to do: Be very cautious when one wallet holds a big slice — a single sell can wipe out the price.
