The Rise and Fall of the KK Token: A True Keik World Adventure
Every journey in the crypto universe is filled with trials, and sometimes, total wipeouts—and KK Token was exactly that kind of story. While learning about crypto, NFTs, and the wild world of blockchain, I came across the idea of creating a “meme coin.” At first, I didn’t even know it was possible, and once I figured out the steps, it sounded like the ultimate next step for Keik World. Why not bring a bit of humor into the mix?
The plan began with creating KK Token on Ethereum, but honestly...it was a complete mess. After several failed attempts, I pivoted to Solana where transaction fees were lower (a lifesaver when you’re experimenting). I finally found a platform that made it possible, minted the coin, and set an outrageously high supply so everyone in Keik World could feel like millionaires. KK Token was just one small piece of the project, but it was so fun to imagine people trading in a token made just for Keik World.
Then came the next step: liquidity. I created a small pool as a “trial and error” exercise, with early supporters who, believe it or not, are still following my journey despite all the chaos. At one point, I even connected with a launchpad that had just opened. You know how it is—new projects need to support each other, right? But it got complicated. While there were other launches, some turned out to be rug pulls. One of those project creators approached me for a collaboration, and though I supported their token, things went south. The whole thing fell apart, and that project ended up rugging everyone. I lost billions of KK Tokens but shrugged it off because, well, I hadn’t even launched the KK Token officially yet. Eventually, that token creator simply burned all KK Tokens on their end (I just found this out recently). Great.
So, after taking a break to rethink things, I came back to the project, only to find that the launchpad was gone. Just gone. Laugh or cry, right? Along with it went the 2 trillion KK Tokens I’d locked up in their locker. Imagine that—tons of other projects had also left their tokens there, unable to retrieve them, and here I was watching a huge portion of KK’s supply vanish.
If you've ever heard me talk about “screwing up” over and over, this story sums it up perfectly. You win some, you lose some, and sometimes, you lose 2 trillion tokens.
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