Pakcoin: What It Is, Why It Vanished, and What to Watch Instead

When you hear Pakcoin, a now-dead cryptocurrency that claimed to be a peer-to-peer digital cash system for Pakistan. Also known as PKC, it was launched in 2014 with little fanfare and vanished by 2017. There’s no active wallet, no exchange listing, no community, and no one claiming to run it. Pakcoin wasn’t just inactive—it was abandoned. It didn’t fail because of market conditions. It failed because it never had a real foundation to begin with.

What Pakcoin shares with other dead coins like XREATORS (ORT), a completely fabricated token with no blockchain or team and Pek (PEK), a meme coin with zero trading volume and no exchange support is this: they all promised something, delivered nothing, and disappeared before anyone could check if they were real. These aren’t just failed projects—they’re warning signs. The crypto space is full of names that look like investments but are actually traps. If a coin has no team, no whitepaper, no GitHub, and no active social media after five years, it’s not a relic—it’s a ghost.

And here’s the real problem: people still search for Pakcoin. They find old forum posts, outdated mining guides, or scammy YouTube videos pretending it’s still worth something. That’s how scams survive—by feeding off curiosity. The same people who got burned by Pakcoin are now being targeted by new fake coins like DeFi11 (D11), a token with zero circulating supply that pretends to offer CoinMarketCap airdrops. The pattern never changes: name that sounds legit, fake website, urgent call to "buy now," then silence. The tools to spot these scams—like checking CoinMarketCap listings, verifying GitHub activity, and looking for real team members—are simple. But most people skip them because they want to believe.

What you’ll find below isn’t a history lesson. It’s a survival guide. These articles show you exactly how to tell real projects from fake ones, what to look for before you invest, and which crypto scams are still active in 2025. From ChainX’s fake volume to C-Cex’s disappearing funds, the pattern is the same. You don’t need to understand blockchain to stay safe. You just need to know what questions to ask—and when to walk away.