This Dogecoin Scam Will Make You Roll Your Eyes Harder Than Ever 🙄

Alright, listen up: meme coins are somehow even more ridiculous than you thought, and—get this—people are using Dogecoin’s ‘charm’ as a free pass to hustle all sorts of totally unrelated garbage tokens. Yeah, shocking, right? Who could have predicted that?

So this developer, goes by ‘inevitable360’—great name, by the way, really inspires confidence, right? Anyway, the guy pops up on social media, waving his arms like, “Hey! Maybe don’t fall for every shiny thing that calls itself Doge-Something.” 🤦‍♂️ Apparently, these random new coins are about as close to Dogecoin as I am to winning a marathon. Zero connection. Dogecoin’s doing its own thing on its own blockchain, minding its own business, and now we’ve got these imposters floating around. Typical.

“Dogevan”? That’s the hot new scam of the week. Some genius tries to market it as a Dogecoin cousin. Look, unless Dogecoin’s suddenly launching a line of minivans, it’s probably got nothing to do with this wannabe project. Details? Fuzzy at best. Credibility? About the same as a “free pizza for life” coupon.

Here’s the kicker: real cryptocurrencies—think Dogecoin, Bitcoin, you’ve heard of them—actually run on their own fancy blockchains. Tech stuff, actual verification, all that jazz. These knockoff tokens? They can be spun up faster than you can say “ponzi.” Fundraising, “community hype,” a marketing plan that’s basically “stick Doge on it and hope for the best.” What could possibly go wrong? 🐕‍🦺💸

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2025-04-15 11:11