Check if a claimed D11 airdrop link matches CoinMarketCap's official structure and verify token legitimacy
Enter the full link you received. Verify if it matches official CoinMarketCap domains
DeFi11 (D11) is not giving out free tokens through a CoinMarketCap Community airdrop-because there is no such thing. If you’ve seen posts, Telegram groups, or YouTube videos claiming otherwise, you’re being targeted by a scam. The truth is simple: D11 has a circulating supply of 0 tokens. You can’t distribute what doesn’t exist.
What Happened to DeFi11?
DeFi11 was a project built to fix problems in fantasy sports platforms-things like rigged outcomes, hidden fees, and lack of transparency. It promised a decentralized app with a built-in wallet, where users could play games, bet on sports, and earn D11 tokens. The idea sounded solid. But in reality, the project never launched properly.
In early 2025, DeFi11 was quietly acquired by VulcanForged, a bigger blockchain gaming company. Instead of continuing the D11 token, VulcanForged absorbed the tech and shut down the original token. That’s why CoinMarketCap shows a circulating supply of zero. No tokens were ever released to the public. No wallets hold D11. No exchanges list it. It’s a ghost token.
Why the Airdrop Claims Are Fake
You might be seeing ads saying, “Claim your free D11 tokens from CoinMarketCap!” Here’s why that’s impossible:
CoinMarketCap doesn’t run airdrops. It’s a price tracker, not a token distributor.
CoinMarketCap’s official airdrop page shows zero active or upcoming airdrops as of October 2025.
No official announcement, no snapshot dates, no wallet requirements-just vague links and fake screenshots.
The D11 token contract has never been deployed on Ethereum or any other chain.
Scammers love using names like CoinMarketCap because people trust it. They’ll send you a link that looks like “airdrop.coinmarketcap.com/d11” - but it’s not. Real CoinMarketCap links always end in .com, never have extra paths like that. If it asks you to connect your wallet, send crypto, or pay a gas fee, it’s a trap.
How Scammers Trick You
These scams follow a pattern:
You see a post on Twitter or Reddit: “D11 airdrop live! 10,000 tokens free!”
You click the link. It looks professional-fake logos, fake countdown timers.
You’re asked to connect your MetaMask or Trust Wallet.
Once connected, the site drains your wallet. Not just your ETH. Your NFTs. Your other tokens. Everything.
There are no exceptions. No legit airdrop ever asks for your private key. No legit airdrop asks you to pay anything upfront. And no legit project with a circulating supply of zero can give out tokens.
What You Should Do Instead
If you’re looking for real DeFi opportunities, here’s what works:
Check CoinMarketCap’s official airdrop page. It’s updated daily. No D11 there.
Look for projects with live trading volume, active GitHub repos, and real team members.
Join official Discord servers-not random Telegram groups.
Use tools like DeFiLlama or CoinGecko to verify token stats before engaging.
Real airdrops happen because a project has already launched. They reward early users, testers, or community members who helped build the platform. They don’t promise free money to people who just signed up yesterday.
Why This Scam Is So Dangerous
This isn’t just about losing a few dollars. In 2024, over 12,000 crypto users lost more than $45 million to fake airdrop scams, according to Chainalysis. Most of them were targeted by projects with zero history-like D11. The scammers don’t care if you believe it. They just need you to click once.
The D11 scam is especially sneaky because it uses real names: VulcanForged, CoinMarketCap. That’s intentional. They’re banking on your trust in big brands. But trust doesn’t mean safety. Always verify. Always double-check. Always assume the worst until you prove it’s real.
What VulcanForged Says
VulcanForged hasn’t mentioned D11 since the acquisition. Their website, Twitter, and blog focus on their own tokens-like VULC and VULC2. They’ve launched new games, integrated with major blockchains, and partnered with real esports teams. If D11 were still active, it would be front and center. It’s not. Because it’s dead.
Their silence speaks louder than any press release.
Final Warning
Don’t fall for it. Don’t connect your wallet. Don’t send any crypto. Don’t share your seed phrase. If someone tells you D11 is being airdropped, they’re either lying or trying to steal from you.
There is no CoinMarketCap Community airdrop for D11. There never was. And there never will be.
Just saw someone in my Discord group get drained of $8k trying to claim D11. I literally screencapped the scam site and posted it with a red circle around the wallet connect button. If you’re new to crypto, just remember: if it sounds too good to be true, it’s a phishing page with a countdown timer.
CoinMarketCap doesn’t even have a ‘community airdrop’ feature. That’s like saying Netflix is giving away free HBO Max subscriptions. Doesn’t make sense.
Also, check the contract address. If it’s not on Etherscan or isn’t verified, RUN. No exceptions.
Patrick Rocillo
October 29, 2025 AT 05:44
Broooooo 😭 I almost clicked that link last week. Thought I was getting free tokens to buy a new PS5. Turns out it was just a fake page that looked like CoinMarketCap but had a .xyz domain. My heart stopped when I saw ‘Connect Wallet’ pop up.
Now I just screenshot every scam post and tag it #D11Scam on Twitter. Someone’s gotta stop these wolves from eating the sheep.
Also, why do they always use ‘10,000 FREE TOKENS’? Like, who even believes that anymore? 😅
Aniket Sable
October 29, 2025 AT 16:37
in india we got so many of this fake airdrop ads on whatsapp and youtube shorts. people think if it has coinmarketcap logo then its real. nooo bro. even my uncle tried to send 0.1 eth for gas fee. i had to call him and explain. now he uses crypto only on binance. 😅
also d11 never even had a whitepaper. how you gonna airdrop someting that dont even exist? lol
Santosh harnaval
October 30, 2025 AT 15:14
Zero supply. No contract. No exchange listing. Case closed.
People still fall for this. Sad.
Will Atkinson
October 31, 2025 AT 13:42
Thank you so much for writing this - I’ve been seeing these posts everywhere and I was worried someone I know would get scammed.
I’ve started sharing this exact breakdown in my local crypto meetup group. One guy said he’d already connected his wallet - we panicked, checked his transaction history, and thankfully he hadn’t signed anything. Just clicked the link.
It’s wild how these scammers piggyback on trusted names. CoinMarketCap, DeFiLlama, even Chainalysis - they all get dragged into these scams. People don’t realize how easy it is to fake a logo or a screenshot.
Also, the ‘pay gas fee’ trick? That’s the oldest trick in the book. Real airdrops don’t charge you to receive free tokens - that’s like paying a bank to deposit your own money.
Let’s keep spreading this info. The more people know, the fewer victims there’ll be.
monica thomas
November 1, 2025 AT 02:06
It is imperative to underscore the fact that CoinMarketCap functions exclusively as a data aggregation platform and does not engage in token distribution activities under any circumstances.
Moreover, the assertion that a circulating supply of zero permits the existence of an airdrop is logically incoherent. One cannot distribute an asset that has not been minted, nor can one claim legitimacy through the unauthorized use of a third-party brand name.
Furthermore, the proliferation of such fraudulent schemes underscores a critical gap in digital financial literacy among retail investors, which warrants institutional intervention and public awareness campaigns.
It is my sincere hope that regulatory bodies will begin to impose sanctions on domains mimicking legitimate financial platforms, as this constitutes a form of digital impersonation with tangible financial consequences.
Edwin Davis
November 1, 2025 AT 05:38
These scams are why America needs to ban crypto. Why are we letting foreigners and anarchists run wild with our people’s money? They use American brands like CoinMarketCap to trick Americans - it’s a cultural attack. We need to shut down these websites and arrest the people behind them. No more ‘trust but verify’ - we need total bans and prison time.
And why is nobody talking about how these scammers use American slang and fake Twitter accounts to look like us? It’s psychological warfare.
Stop enabling this. Ban crypto. Now.
emma bullivant
November 1, 2025 AT 18:10
wait… if d11 was acquired by vulcanforged… does that mean the whole thing was a honeypot from the start? like… what if the devs never intended to launch it? what if they just raised funds, built a fake website, and then quietly dissolved it? what if the ‘acquisition’ was just a cover-up?
i’m not saying it’s a government plot… but… what if it was?
why would a legit company take over a project with zero tokens and not mention it? why not rebrand it? why silence?
also… i think coinmarketcap knows. they just don’t care. they make money off traffic. scam clicks = revenue.
just saying.
Michael Hagerman
November 3, 2025 AT 08:07
Okay so I was scrolling and saw a video saying ‘D11 airdrop ends in 2 HOURS’ - I thought it was real until I noticed the video had the same background as 12 other scam videos from different accounts.
Then I checked the channel - created 3 days ago, 4 videos, all about ‘free crypto’.
Then I looked at the comments - 90% of them were bot replies like ‘CLAIMED!’ or ‘THANKS BRO’.
Then I saw one real comment: ‘this is fake’ - and it had 3 likes.
That’s the problem. The scammers control the narrative. The truth gets buried under spam.
Someone needs to report these channels. Not just ignore them.
Also - why do they always use ‘HURRY’? Like, are we all running out of time? 😭
Laura Herrelop
November 4, 2025 AT 20:30
What if… the whole thing was a test? Like… what if CoinMarketCap let this happen on purpose? To see how many people would fall for it? To gather data on gullibility?
Think about it - they have access to every wallet that connects to their site. What if they’re quietly logging every address that interacts with a fake D11 page? What if this isn’t a scam… it’s a surveillance operation?
And what if VulcanForged didn’t ‘acquire’ D11… they absorbed it to bury evidence? What if the ‘zero supply’ is because all the tokens were burned… or transferred to a black hole wallet controlled by a shadow entity?
They say ‘no airdrop’… but who controls the narrative?
I’m not paranoid. I’m prepared.
Nisha Sharmal
November 6, 2025 AT 04:30
Indians are the easiest to scam. Always clicking links. Always thinking ‘free money’. You think because someone says ‘CoinMarketCap’ it’s real? Even your mom knows better.
And yet here you are, still falling for it. No wonder crypto is full of losers.
Go back to WhatsApp group scams. At least they’re honest about being scams.
Karla Alcantara
November 6, 2025 AT 22:01
I just want to say - if you’re reading this and you’re new to crypto, please don’t feel bad if you almost fell for this. I did too. Last year I sent $200 to a fake ‘Solana airdrop’ because I trusted the logo.
It hurt. But I learned. Now I check everything: contract addresses, official websites, Twitter verification badges.
And I tell my friends. I post screenshots. I comment on scam posts with ‘DON’T CLICK’. It’s small, but it helps.
You’re not alone. We’ve all been there. Let’s help each other out.
And hey - if you’re reading this and you’re still scared? That’s okay. Take a breath. Walk away. Come back tomorrow. Better safe than sorry.
Jessica Smith
November 8, 2025 AT 18:08
People who fall for this are idiots. No brain. No research. Just click and pray.
You think crypto is for you? You don’t even know how to check a website URL. You deserve to lose everything.
Stop posting about ‘free tokens’. Stop being a sheep. Grow up.
And if you’re still reading this? Go delete your wallet. You’re a liability.
Petrina Baldwin
November 9, 2025 AT 12:29
Scam. Don’t click.
Ralph Nicolay
November 10, 2025 AT 06:20
It is my professional opinion, based upon an analysis of blockchain metadata and domain registration records, that the D11 airdrop phenomenon constitutes a systemic phishing vector leveraging brand mimicry and psychological priming to exploit cognitive biases among non-technical users.
Furthermore, the absence of any deployed smart contract on Ethereum, BSC, or Polygon confirms the non-existence of a functional token standard, thereby rendering all claims of token distribution null and void under the principles of cryptographic verifiability.
It is recommended that affected parties immediately revoke all token allowances and conduct a full wallet audit using Etherscan or similar tools.
sundar M
November 11, 2025 AT 23:48
bro i love how this post is so clear and calm - no drama, just facts.
i shared this with my whole family in india. my grandma asked me if she can still get d11 tokens for her phone wallet 😂 i laughed so hard.
but then i showed her the coinmarketcap airdrop page - zero results - and she said ‘oh, so no free money? okay then’.
real talk - if we teach people to check the official site first, we can stop 90% of these scams.
thank you for this. seriously.
Nick Carey
November 13, 2025 AT 16:31
Ugh. I read this whole thing. I’m tired now.
Can we just move on? I wanna see the new Solana meme coin.
Also… did anyone else notice the guy who wrote this has 17 paragraphs? That’s a novel. Not a Reddit post.
Anyway… D11? Never heard of it. Probably fake. Moving on.
Sonu Singh
November 15, 2025 AT 14:20
hey guys i just checked etherscan for d11 token and its not there. also vulcanforged’s github is updated daily but no d11 code. so yeah its dead.
also i saw a post on reddit saying ‘i claimed 5000 d11’ - but the wallet address had 0 balance and 0 transactions. fake screenshot.
just dont click. its easy.
Peter Schwalm
November 16, 2025 AT 04:57
I’ve been in crypto since 2017. Seen a hundred scams. This one’s classic.
What makes it dangerous is how professional it looks. Fake logos. Fake countdowns. Fake testimonials.
But here’s the trick: if a project has no trading volume, no exchange listings, and zero supply - it’s not a project. It’s a ghost.
And ghosts don’t give out free money.
Just remember: real projects don’t need to beg you to claim tokens. They’re already on exchanges. They have users. They have traction.
If you’re unsure? Wait. Research. Ask. Don’t click.
angela sastre
October 28, 2025 AT 11:11Just saw someone in my Discord group get drained of $8k trying to claim D11. I literally screencapped the scam site and posted it with a red circle around the wallet connect button. If you’re new to crypto, just remember: if it sounds too good to be true, it’s a phishing page with a countdown timer.
CoinMarketCap doesn’t even have a ‘community airdrop’ feature. That’s like saying Netflix is giving away free HBO Max subscriptions. Doesn’t make sense.
Also, check the contract address. If it’s not on Etherscan or isn’t verified, RUN. No exceptions.
Patrick Rocillo
October 29, 2025 AT 05:44Broooooo 😭 I almost clicked that link last week. Thought I was getting free tokens to buy a new PS5. Turns out it was just a fake page that looked like CoinMarketCap but had a .xyz domain. My heart stopped when I saw ‘Connect Wallet’ pop up.
Now I just screenshot every scam post and tag it #D11Scam on Twitter. Someone’s gotta stop these wolves from eating the sheep.
Also, why do they always use ‘10,000 FREE TOKENS’? Like, who even believes that anymore? 😅
Aniket Sable
October 29, 2025 AT 16:37in india we got so many of this fake airdrop ads on whatsapp and youtube shorts. people think if it has coinmarketcap logo then its real. nooo bro. even my uncle tried to send 0.1 eth for gas fee. i had to call him and explain. now he uses crypto only on binance. 😅
also d11 never even had a whitepaper. how you gonna airdrop someting that dont even exist? lol
Santosh harnaval
October 30, 2025 AT 15:14Zero supply. No contract. No exchange listing. Case closed.
People still fall for this. Sad.
Will Atkinson
October 31, 2025 AT 13:42Thank you so much for writing this - I’ve been seeing these posts everywhere and I was worried someone I know would get scammed.
I’ve started sharing this exact breakdown in my local crypto meetup group. One guy said he’d already connected his wallet - we panicked, checked his transaction history, and thankfully he hadn’t signed anything. Just clicked the link.
It’s wild how these scammers piggyback on trusted names. CoinMarketCap, DeFiLlama, even Chainalysis - they all get dragged into these scams. People don’t realize how easy it is to fake a logo or a screenshot.
Also, the ‘pay gas fee’ trick? That’s the oldest trick in the book. Real airdrops don’t charge you to receive free tokens - that’s like paying a bank to deposit your own money.
Let’s keep spreading this info. The more people know, the fewer victims there’ll be.
monica thomas
November 1, 2025 AT 02:06It is imperative to underscore the fact that CoinMarketCap functions exclusively as a data aggregation platform and does not engage in token distribution activities under any circumstances.
Moreover, the assertion that a circulating supply of zero permits the existence of an airdrop is logically incoherent. One cannot distribute an asset that has not been minted, nor can one claim legitimacy through the unauthorized use of a third-party brand name.
Furthermore, the proliferation of such fraudulent schemes underscores a critical gap in digital financial literacy among retail investors, which warrants institutional intervention and public awareness campaigns.
It is my sincere hope that regulatory bodies will begin to impose sanctions on domains mimicking legitimate financial platforms, as this constitutes a form of digital impersonation with tangible financial consequences.
Edwin Davis
November 1, 2025 AT 05:38These scams are why America needs to ban crypto. Why are we letting foreigners and anarchists run wild with our people’s money? They use American brands like CoinMarketCap to trick Americans - it’s a cultural attack. We need to shut down these websites and arrest the people behind them. No more ‘trust but verify’ - we need total bans and prison time.
And why is nobody talking about how these scammers use American slang and fake Twitter accounts to look like us? It’s psychological warfare.
Stop enabling this. Ban crypto. Now.
emma bullivant
November 1, 2025 AT 18:10wait… if d11 was acquired by vulcanforged… does that mean the whole thing was a honeypot from the start? like… what if the devs never intended to launch it? what if they just raised funds, built a fake website, and then quietly dissolved it? what if the ‘acquisition’ was just a cover-up?
i’m not saying it’s a government plot… but… what if it was?
why would a legit company take over a project with zero tokens and not mention it? why not rebrand it? why silence?
also… i think coinmarketcap knows. they just don’t care. they make money off traffic. scam clicks = revenue.
just saying.
Michael Hagerman
November 3, 2025 AT 08:07Okay so I was scrolling and saw a video saying ‘D11 airdrop ends in 2 HOURS’ - I thought it was real until I noticed the video had the same background as 12 other scam videos from different accounts.
Then I checked the channel - created 3 days ago, 4 videos, all about ‘free crypto’.
Then I looked at the comments - 90% of them were bot replies like ‘CLAIMED!’ or ‘THANKS BRO’.
Then I saw one real comment: ‘this is fake’ - and it had 3 likes.
That’s the problem. The scammers control the narrative. The truth gets buried under spam.
Someone needs to report these channels. Not just ignore them.
Also - why do they always use ‘HURRY’? Like, are we all running out of time? 😭
Laura Herrelop
November 4, 2025 AT 20:30What if… the whole thing was a test? Like… what if CoinMarketCap let this happen on purpose? To see how many people would fall for it? To gather data on gullibility?
Think about it - they have access to every wallet that connects to their site. What if they’re quietly logging every address that interacts with a fake D11 page? What if this isn’t a scam… it’s a surveillance operation?
And what if VulcanForged didn’t ‘acquire’ D11… they absorbed it to bury evidence? What if the ‘zero supply’ is because all the tokens were burned… or transferred to a black hole wallet controlled by a shadow entity?
They say ‘no airdrop’… but who controls the narrative?
I’m not paranoid. I’m prepared.
Nisha Sharmal
November 6, 2025 AT 04:30Indians are the easiest to scam. Always clicking links. Always thinking ‘free money’. You think because someone says ‘CoinMarketCap’ it’s real? Even your mom knows better.
And yet here you are, still falling for it. No wonder crypto is full of losers.
Go back to WhatsApp group scams. At least they’re honest about being scams.
Karla Alcantara
November 6, 2025 AT 22:01I just want to say - if you’re reading this and you’re new to crypto, please don’t feel bad if you almost fell for this. I did too. Last year I sent $200 to a fake ‘Solana airdrop’ because I trusted the logo.
It hurt. But I learned. Now I check everything: contract addresses, official websites, Twitter verification badges.
And I tell my friends. I post screenshots. I comment on scam posts with ‘DON’T CLICK’. It’s small, but it helps.
You’re not alone. We’ve all been there. Let’s help each other out.
And hey - if you’re reading this and you’re still scared? That’s okay. Take a breath. Walk away. Come back tomorrow. Better safe than sorry.
Jessica Smith
November 8, 2025 AT 18:08People who fall for this are idiots. No brain. No research. Just click and pray.
You think crypto is for you? You don’t even know how to check a website URL. You deserve to lose everything.
Stop posting about ‘free tokens’. Stop being a sheep. Grow up.
And if you’re still reading this? Go delete your wallet. You’re a liability.
Petrina Baldwin
November 9, 2025 AT 12:29Scam. Don’t click.
Ralph Nicolay
November 10, 2025 AT 06:20It is my professional opinion, based upon an analysis of blockchain metadata and domain registration records, that the D11 airdrop phenomenon constitutes a systemic phishing vector leveraging brand mimicry and psychological priming to exploit cognitive biases among non-technical users.
Furthermore, the absence of any deployed smart contract on Ethereum, BSC, or Polygon confirms the non-existence of a functional token standard, thereby rendering all claims of token distribution null and void under the principles of cryptographic verifiability.
It is recommended that affected parties immediately revoke all token allowances and conduct a full wallet audit using Etherscan or similar tools.
sundar M
November 11, 2025 AT 23:48bro i love how this post is so clear and calm - no drama, just facts.
i shared this with my whole family in india. my grandma asked me if she can still get d11 tokens for her phone wallet 😂 i laughed so hard.
but then i showed her the coinmarketcap airdrop page - zero results - and she said ‘oh, so no free money? okay then’.
real talk - if we teach people to check the official site first, we can stop 90% of these scams.
thank you for this. seriously.
Nick Carey
November 13, 2025 AT 16:31Ugh. I read this whole thing. I’m tired now.
Can we just move on? I wanna see the new Solana meme coin.
Also… did anyone else notice the guy who wrote this has 17 paragraphs? That’s a novel. Not a Reddit post.
Anyway… D11? Never heard of it. Probably fake. Moving on.
Sonu Singh
November 15, 2025 AT 14:20hey guys i just checked etherscan for d11 token and its not there. also vulcanforged’s github is updated daily but no d11 code. so yeah its dead.
also i saw a post on reddit saying ‘i claimed 5000 d11’ - but the wallet address had 0 balance and 0 transactions. fake screenshot.
just dont click. its easy.
Peter Schwalm
November 16, 2025 AT 04:57I’ve been in crypto since 2017. Seen a hundred scams. This one’s classic.
What makes it dangerous is how professional it looks. Fake logos. Fake countdowns. Fake testimonials.
But here’s the trick: if a project has no trading volume, no exchange listings, and zero supply - it’s not a project. It’s a ghost.
And ghosts don’t give out free money.
Just remember: real projects don’t need to beg you to claim tokens. They’re already on exchanges. They have users. They have traction.
If you’re unsure? Wait. Research. Ask. Don’t click.
You’ll thank yourself later.