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Pi Network: Is it the Biggest Crypto Rug Pull of 2025?

Pi Network: Is it the Biggest Crypto Rug Pull of 2025?

In what some are now calling the largest crypto rug pull of 2025, Pi Network—once hailed as a revolutionary mobile mining platform—has come under intense scrutiny following a massive token dump and a dramatic price crash.

Investigative insights, shared by X account, known as “Atlas” have shed light on a complex web of hype, vague promises, centralized control, and insider trading that may have defrauded millions of hopeful users.

The Rise of Pi Network

Launched with a bold vision to democratize cryptocurrency mining via smartphones, Pi Network quickly attracted millions. The promise? Free tokens mined through a simple mobile app and future rewards once the project went live. Over time, delays mounted as the team postponed mainnet launches and maintained a closed beta. Still, faith in the project endured.

According to Atlas in early 2025, Pi finally opened its Mainnet and began trading. Speculation and optimism drove the token to surge from $0.66 to $1.60. However, beneath the surface, troubling signs were beginning to emerge.

The Collapse

In May 2025, shortly after Pi Network’s hyped appearance at Consensus 2025, the price collapsed by more than 50% within days he said. The timing coincided suspiciously with the announcement of a $100 million VC fund—a move that was seen by many as a distraction from the lack of any real technological progress.

As users waited for functional dApps or decentralization milestones, insiders made their move.

Exposing the Insider Dump

Blockchain analyst and community figure Dr. Picoin revealed a 12 million Pi token transfer linked to a wallet—GABT7EMP—allegedly controlled by the Pi Core Team. His analysis shows the tokens were dumped right at the price peak. Blockchain data from Piscan confirmed massive outflows from this wallet at the height of market activity.

“They sold while you were distracted by hype and announcements,” Dr. Picoin wrote. This revelation caused a wave of panic and accelerated the crash.

The Pattern of Deception

According to Atlas’s deep-dive thread, the Pi Network team has consistently used distraction tactics to maintain community interest. Instead of delivering on the expected 100 dApps and decentralized governance, they rolled out vague promises like “Web3 integrations” and VC funding rounds.

Meanwhile, critical questions remain unanswered:

  • Why does the token transfer perfectly align with the crash?
  • Why was the transfer poorly communicated if it was just a testnet-to-mainnet migration?
  • Why are governance and audits still absent?

Past Red Flags Ignored

This isn’t the first controversy surrounding Pi Network. In 2021, 17GB of user data from Vietnam was leaked online. Chinese regulators had warned early on that Pi’s “free mining” model might be a front for data harvesting. The CEO of Bybit had even labeled the project a scam years earlier.

Despite these warnings, Pi grew its user base to over 60 million. But Atlas points out that the number of active wallets remains suspiciously low—raising doubts about real adoption versus inflated user metrics.

A Funnel, Not a Blockchain?

All these findings fuel a critical question: is Pi Network truly a blockchain project—or just a clever marketing funnel driven by referrals and speculation?

There is still no DAO, no open-source code, and no functional ecosystem. Core control remains centralized, and growth is fueled by invitation codes rather than utility. Atlas concludes, “This isn’t innovation—it’s marketing.”

Source

Author
Kosta Gushterov

Reporter at Coindoo

Kosta has been a part of the team since 2021 and has solidified his position with a thirst for knowledge, incredible dedication to his work and a “detective-like” mindset. He not only covers a wide range of trending topics, he also creates reviews, PR articles and educational content. His work has also been referenced by other news outlets.

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