B3
B3BaseSafuScan criteria status
A deal-breaker condition was detected. SafuScan marks this as avoid.
Some permanent protections are verified, but at least one required proof is missing. Keep live monitoring on.
Supply expansion is not available through the standard mint flag.
Checks renounced owner, hidden owner and reclaimable ownership.
Checks pausable transfers, blacklist controls and balance-edit authority.
No proxy upgrade flag detected.
Permanent LP burn proof is missing; time locks are live-monitoring evidence, not irreversible proof.
No honeypot, cannot-sell-all, or extreme sell-tax condition was detected.
- No honeypot — sells work
- Fixed supply (not mintable)
- Ownership renounced
- Verified source code
- Honeypot — live simulation: A simulated buy & sell shows you can't sell.
- Honeypot — live simulation: A simulated buy & sell shows you can't sell.
- Sources disagree on honeypot: GoPlus static check and the live simulation differ — treat with caution.
- Possible hidden insider wallets: The deployer wallet does not show a large balance, but the top ordinary wallets hold ~28% combined. Scammers sometimes split supply into private wallets to hide insider control.
Scam pattern evidence
SafuScan groups the raw signals into known rug-pull playbooks. This is evidence-based risk research, not an accusation of identity.
The token may let buyers enter but prevent or punish exits.
- Honeypot — live simulation: A simulated buy & sell shows you can't sell.
- Honeypot — live simulation: A simulated buy & sell shows you can't sell.
- Sources disagree on honeypot: GoPlus static check and the live simulation differ — treat with caution.
Evidence to record next: Keep the live sell-simulation result, sell tax, and source agreement as evidence.
The deployer wallet may look small while multiple ordinary wallets collectively control supply.
- Possible hidden insider wallets: The deployer wallet does not show a large balance, but the top ordinary wallets hold ~28% combined. Scammers sometimes split supply into private wallets to hide insider control.
Evidence to record next: Confirm with transfer-history clustering: deployer sends, early swaps, common funding wallets, and coordinated sells.
Before you buy
Plain-English safety check · not financial advice▸ Why is this risky?
What it means: You may be able to buy this token but blocked from selling it — your money gets trapped.
How scammers use it: Scammers hide sell-blocking code in the contract, let buyers pile in, then cash out themselves while no one else can exit.
What to do: Do not buy. A token you can't sell is worth nothing to you, no matter the price chart.
▸ 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.
▸ Why is this risky?
What it means: A percentage of each trade is taken as a fee — and on some tokens the owner can raise it.
How scammers use it: Scammers set the sell tax to 100% (or raise it after you buy), so any sale returns almost nothing — a soft honeypot.
What to do: Avoid high taxes, and especially tokens where the tax can be changed after launch.
▸ 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.
What should I do next?
- Do not buy yet — the red flags above make this high rug-pull risk.
- Check this deployer's track record →
- Verify the liquidity is actually locked or burned →
- If you already hold it, try a tiny test sell before doing anything else.
- Add it to your watchlist (☆ at the top) to monitor — instead of buying.
Guidance only — not financial advice. A clean check lowers risk but never guarantees safety.
Showing the essentials. Switch to Advanced for the full security panel, live trades and holder breakdown.
Live trades
auto-updatingTop holders
57.1% combinedSecurity · Rug check
Honeypot — live simulation. A simulated buy & sell shows you can't sell.
Cross-checked: GoPlus + honeypot.is live simulation
▸ Why is this risky?
What it means: You may be able to buy this token but blocked from selling it — your money gets trapped.
How scammers use it: Scammers hide sell-blocking code in the contract, let buyers pile in, then cash out themselves while no one else can exit.
What to do: Do not buy. A token you can't sell is worth nothing to you, no matter the price chart.
- Sources disagree on honeypot — GoPlus static check and the live simulation differ — treat with caution.
▸ Why is this risky?
What it means: You may be able to buy this token but blocked from selling it — your money gets trapped.
How scammers use it: Scammers hide sell-blocking code in the contract, let buyers pile in, then cash out themselves while no one else can exit.
What to do: Do not buy. A token you can't sell is worth nothing to you, no matter the price chart.
- Possible hidden insider wallets — The deployer wallet does not show a large balance, but the top ordinary wallets hold ~28% combined. Scammers sometimes split supply into private wallets to hide insider control.
▸ Why is this risky?
What it means: The deployer wallet may look small, but several ordinary wallets together control a large share of supply.
How scammers use it: Scammers can move tokens through swaps or fresh private wallets so the creator wallet looks clean while related wallets still hold enough to dump.
What to do: Treat this as a concentration warning. Check the top wallets, early transfers, and whether those wallets sell in coordination.
- LP lock unverified — Couldn't confirm liquidity is locked or burned — a removable LP is the classic rug. Verify before trading.
▸ 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.
Creator / deployer
No prior honeypot deployments flagged for this creator.
Based on GoPlus deployer data. SafuScan is also building a cross-token track record for this wallet — a rug-rate per deployer — as more of its launches are tracked.