Enter details from a suspected airdrop to verify its legitimacy based on key security criteria.
There’s no official LESS Network airdrop happening right now. Not in June, not in August, and not as of November 23, 2025. If you’ve seen posts claiming otherwise-on Twitter, Telegram, or YouTube-you’re likely looking at fake announcements or scams trying to cash in on the hype around other real airdrops like CESS Network or Bless Network.
Search any major crypto news site, airdrop tracker, or official blockchain explorer, and you won’t find a single verified source mentioning LESS Network running an airdrop. No whitepaper. No smart contract address. No Twitter announcement from their official account. No Discord channel with verified moderators. That’s not an oversight. That’s a red flag.
Compare that to CESS Network, which ran a real airdrop in mid-2025 with clear rules: 1.3 million CESS tokens distributed, registration dates published, claim deadlines set, and a public blockchain ledger showing token distribution. Or Bless Network, which opened registration with a step-by-step guide and a public wallet for token distribution. These projects have transparency. LESS Network doesn’t.
LESS Network, as a project, doesn’t appear to exist in any official capacity. There’s no website with a working domain. No GitHub repository with code commits. No team members listed on LinkedIn. No venture capital backing disclosed. No mention in CoinGecko, CoinMarketCap, or any blockchain analytics platform. If a project is planning a token launch or airdrop, it leaves digital footprints. LESS Network leaves none.
Some people confuse LESS Network with similar-sounding names like CESS Network (a decentralized storage project) or Lisk (a blockchain platform). But those are completely different entities. CESS has a working mainnet, real users, and active development. LESS Network has nothing.
Scammers don’t create fake projects from scratch. They piggyback on names that sound real. They take a word like “LESS” and pair it with “Network” because it sounds technical and trustworthy. Then they flood social media with screenshots of fake claim portals, fake token prices, and fake testimonials.
Here’s how it works:
This isn’t hypothetical. In September 2025, over 1,200 users lost funds to a similar scam using the name “LUX Network.” The fake site looked identical to real crypto projects. The domain was registered the day before the scam went live. The same pattern is happening now with LESS Network.
Here’s how to protect yourself:
If you’re looking for real airdrops in late 2025, focus on projects with public track records:
These projects have live websites, active communities, and verifiable on-chain activity. You can check their token distributions on Etherscan, Solana Explorer, or other block explorers. You can’t do that with LESS Network.
Airdrops are a legitimate way for new projects to distribute tokens and build community. But they’re also one of the most abused tools in crypto. In 2025 alone, over $87 million was stolen through fake airdrop scams, according to blockchain security firm SlowMist. Most victims weren’t new to crypto-they just trusted a name that sounded familiar.
LESS Network isn’t a project. It’s a trap. And the only thing it’s distributing is losses.
If someone tells you “LESS Network is dropping tokens soon,” ask them for the official website. Ask them for the smart contract address. Ask them for the audit report. If they can’t answer any of those, they’re either misinformed or trying to trick you.
Don’t click. Don’t connect. Don’t send anything. Walk away. Your wallet will thank you.
Soham Kulkarni
November 23, 2025 AT 14:26heard about this less network thing yesterday. thought it was real till i checked the domain. registered 3 days ago. yikes.