A new crypto presale shows up in my feed almost every week now. Same playbook, pretty much every time: a countdown clock ticking down, a "funds raised" number climbing, and a promise of huge staking rewards.
Some of these projects turn out fine. A lot don't. Over time I've built a short mental checklist I run through before I even think about connecting a wallet. Sharing it here.
That countdown timer isn't really about the deadline
Countdown timers are designed to make you act before you think. That's kind of the whole point of them.
I've seen plenty reset or quietly extend once they hit zero. It's not a bug, it's just how these pages work.
If a deadline is real, it usually shows up somewhere outside the project's own site too, like an exchange confirming a listing date.
A 168% staking APY sounds great. It's also a flag.
Anytime I see triple-digit APY on a brand new token, I slow down.
Most of the time, those "rewards" are just newly minted tokens being handed out. More supply, same demand, and the price has somewhere to go: down.
That's not the same as real yield backed by revenue or fees. A token that hasn't traded yet has no track record, so any advertised return is just a number on a page.
Can you trust the "funds raised" counter?
Honestly, not on its own.
That number comes straight from the project, and most presale contracts aren't public or audited in a way that lets anyone check it independently.
I treat it as a claim, not a fact, until something outside the project confirms it.
Skip the giveaway link
Presale giveaways are one of the more common ways wallet-drainer scams spread right now.
The pattern is usually the same: connect your wallet to "claim" a prize, and a malicious contract quietly drains it.
My rule is simple. I don't connect a wallet to a giveaway page, full stop, even if it's shared from an account that looks official.
My checklist before putting in any money
Nothing fancy, just this:
|
Check |
Why it matters |
|
Team identity |
Anonymous teams are harder to hold accountable |
|
Smart contract audit |
Shows if the code has been reviewed for exploits |
|
Token distribution |
High team/insider allocation can mean early dumping |
|
Liquidity lock |
Confirms funds can't be pulled right after launch |
|
Exchange listing proof |
Look for confirmation from the exchange, not just the project |
|
Independent coverage |
Check if any outlet outside the project has verified claims |
"Tier 1 listing coming soon" doesn't mean much yet
A lot of presales mention future "Tier 1" listings without naming the actual exchange or a date.
Until the exchange itself confirms it, on its own channels, I file this under "plan," not "fact."
Bottom line
Presale pages are built to move fast and create pressure, timers, big APY numbers, giveaway links. That's true whether the project behind it is solid or not.
Taking five extra minutes to check the team, the audit, the contract, and whether anyone outside the project has actually verified the claims has saved me from more than one bad decision.