The Rise (and Fall) of AI Crypto Tokens

In late 2025, amid breathless talk of artificial intelligence, a new gold rush swept the crypto markets: every week seemed to bring a fresh token touting itself as the “AI” coin of the future. These projects – with names like DeAgentAI ($AIA), ChainOpera AI ($COAI), and dozens of others – promised everything from autonomous trading agents to decentralized neural networks. Retail investors rushed in on FOMO, only to see dizzying price swings and, in many cases, brutal dumps. In fact, one analysis finds that cryptocurrency scams have exploded thanks to generative AI tools – rising 456% in a year – and the FBI recorded nearly 150,000 crypto fraud complaints in 2024 (over $10.7 billion lost globally). The new AI labels appear to supercharge this effect.

We took a hard look at the latest AI-themed altcoins.
The result: a familiar pump‑and‑dump script dressed in “machine learning” clothing. On one hand, marketing materials ring with futuristic jargon about self-driving code and “collaborative intelligence.” On the other, on‑chain data and exchange posts reveal extreme volatility, outsized whales, and hollow fundamentals. Below we unpack the evidence – from shady tokenomics to absurd pitchbooks – and present case studies of three recent launches.

Red Flags of the AI Coin Craze

Even a cursory glance shows the same red flags found in ordinary crypto hypes, just with an “AI” sticker on the box. Key warning signs include:

🚩 Whale concentration & volatility: Top addresses often control nearly the entire supply. For example, Binance’s own analysis found the top 10 wallets hold 96% of COAI’s circulating tokens. No wonder its price blasted from pennies to an all-time high, then plummeted. Binance analysts noted COAI’s “rapid surges followed by swift, brutal crashes” were likely driven by whales dumping on retail. In short, the swings aren’t organic market demand but big hands at work.

🚩 Centralized contracts: Many AI coins are anything but decentralized. ChainOpera AI’s smart contract is a non-renounced proxy, meaning the devs can still pause trading or mint tokens at will. DeAgentAI’s token similarly had owner privileges at launch. In practice this means a small team can sweep in to manipulate price or exit quietly – as one Binance report bluntly put it, “the pump was engineered, the dump was expected, and the control still sits in one wallet.”.

🚩 No audit / hidden team: Projects were promoted by Telegram “influencers” or Twitter ads, but behind the gloss often lurked anonymity. A Binance “Scam Alert” on Neural AI Token (NAIT) listed the usual signs: anonymous devs, no GitHub or audit, paid promotions and promises of “guaranteed” returns. That one famously raised ~$26M in a day, then vanished. (More on NAIT below.)

🚩 Jargon-heavy narratives: Marketing is flooded with buzzwords – “super AI app”, “creator economy”, “AI-native blockchain”, etc. – but no real product. For instance, ChainOpera AI’s whitepaper gushes about “co-created AI agents” and a “full-stack AI infrastructure” for a “new era of open and collaborative AI”. These phrases sound high-tech but boil down to fluff: in practice, no working AI was demonstrated. The shiny AI label is just a classic gambit to attract hype money.

🚩 Exchange hype: The frenzy is often ignited by exchange listings or celebrity bait. Binance and others have been happy to list these tokens, sometimes fueling the pump. For example, one Binance Square post hyped DeAgentAI’s debut, noting spot and 50× leveraged futures listings that pushed its market cap to $650M in a day. On social media, memes and tweets play up any connection to Elon Musk or industry buzz. (On Solana, the “ACT I: The AI Prophecy” meme token saw a 90% spike when Musk reacted to a Discord chat.) In short, exchanges broadcast the hype and attract buyers, then poor early entrants are left holding empty bags when the hype fades.

All these elements together form the classic altcoin pump: heavy marketing, big promises – and technical setups that let insiders bail out at the peak. Below we walk through a few of the most blatant examples from late 2025, charting the absurd narratives versus the harsh realities on the blockchain.

Chart: The Solana-based “ACT I: The AI Prophecy” token (ACT-USDT, Solana) rocketed about 90% on a single Elon Musk tweet and a Binance listing, then crashed back. (Source: DexScreener.)

Even outside purely scammy tokens, the mania plays out. The chart above illustrates one case: in late 2024 the $ACTI memecoin surged after Binance listed it and Elon Musk gave it a thumbs-up. The rise was spectacular (a single green candle shooting market cap to ~$770M) but unsustainable – as a 99Bitcoins analysis noted, the coin “corrected down 55% from the ATH” before Musk’s mention briefly revived it. It’s a cautionary show of what “AI” meme-fueled FOMO looks like on-chain.

Case Study: ChainOpera AI ($COAI)

ChainOpera AI, trading under ticker COAI, is a BNB-chain project that went viral in October 2025. Its pitch is grandiose: the CoinGecko listing boasts “collaborative intelligence” and an “AI‑native blockchain” to align developers and users. In reality, the token’s story is a red‑flag pump.

By mid-October, COAI’s price blasted up to $43.81 (its all-time high) from near-zero just weeks earlier. In the next month it swung wildly (trading between ~$13 and $25 in 24h on Oct 24). CoinGecko reports the token pulled in roughly $290 million in 24‑hour volume – a 48.5% jump from the day before – as speculators piled in. Its FDV (fully diluted value) briefly topped $19.7 billion on these moves.

But on-chain analysis tells a darker tale. Blockchain data reveal the supply was highly centralized. As Binance’s xoniahe noted, “the top 10 wallet addresses hold over 96% of the circulating COAI supply” – meaning a handful of insiders controlled essentially all the tokens. The contract itself was not immutable: it was a proxy giving the creators admin powers. In Binance’s words, the dev team could “change critical functions like minting, pausing, or adjusting fees anytime”, so the “community” token was really a lever for owner control. In practice, those insiders timed their exits perfectly. Chainscan shows large transfers from the hidden whale wallets to exchanges right before each crash. Indeed, a Binance Square exposé flatly concluded:

“COAI isn’t decentralized… Until ownership is renounced… this token remains a high-risk play wrapped in big promises.”

In other words, COAI checked all the boxes of a rug‑pull: an admin‑controlled contract, lopsided token distribution, and engineered hype. When the dumps came, ordinary holders had no defense.

Case Study: DeAgentAI ($AIA)

DeAgentAI’s token ($AIA) was branded as infrastructure for “autonomous AI agents,” with a staged rollout via the WEEX exchange and later by Binance and Bybit. The project even issued a press release celebrating AIA’s debut on Binance Alpha and Futures, bragging that the token’s FDV (fully diluted valuation) jumped from $200M at launch to $650M within the first day. But as usual, the real highlight was the volatility.

Trading charts show AIA exploded briefly and then crashed. Bybit’s price page (Oct 24) lists AIA at $1.34, down over 64% from its October peak of ~$3.72. The coin’s 30-day return was +326% at one point (from a late-September low of $0.247 to mid-October highs) – a parabolic move followed by a steep slide. In plain terms: buyers who got in at $0.30 saw the price hit well over $3 and then collapse back near $1.

Predictably, market observers raised alarms. On Binance Square, a creator using the handle HODLStriker issued a blistering post after AIA’s launch: “launched around $0.31 and within 1–2 days crashed to $0.10 – a brutal 60–70% dump”, with “no strong fundamentals, unclear utility” and signs of “heavy insider profit-taking”. This echo exactly what on-chain scans showed: like COAI, AIA had proxies and whales ready to exit. It too was riding the AI buzz – but ultimately seemed to be another speculative tidal wave that tossed out latecomers.

Case Study: Neural AI Token (NAIT)

Not all AI-token schemes try to build on-chain infrastructure. Neural AI Token (NAIT) took a cruder tack. In June 2025, NAIT was marketed on social channels as an “AI-powered” trading algorithm token, promising guaranteed 10× gains. Binance’s own Scam Alert describes the setup: NAIT’s Telegram promotions and Twitter ads featured AI buzz, but behind the scenes the project had no real product. Thousands of retail investors poured in during its “presale.” Within 24 hours, the developers “rugged all liquidity and disappeared” – draining wallets and deleting websites. Victims lost on the order of $26 million. The Binance warning listed every classic sign: “anonymous team, no audit or GitHub repo, paid promotions, unrealistic ‘guaranteed’ returns”. NAIT never had any real connection to AI; it was a straight-up rug pull disguised with scientific jargon.

Exchanges’ Role: Fueling the Fire

Major exchanges like Binance and Bybit played a big part in this cycle. On one level, their listing of AI coins created hype opportunities. Binance’s marketing machine celebrated DeAgentAI’s launch – the press release even emphasized 50× leveraged futures trading on AIA, and the pop in AIA’s valuation as a “milestone” of AI infrastructure. Similarly, when ChainOpera was listed on Binance’s Spot/Alpha markets, the mere listing helped catapult its price. Bybit too has promoted AIA (listing spot and perpetual pairs), giving retail easy access to the token.

At the same time, these exchanges have had to warn customers about the aftermath. Binance’s official blogs and posts turned into a running log of cautionary tales. For COAI, Binance Square featured multiple advisories: one post explicitly labeled it a “SCAM WARNING”, noting COAI’s “extreme volatility” and whale-driven swings that left small holders “wiped out”. Analysts urged investors that hype ≠ value and reminded them these projects lacked real fundamentals. In practice, by the time regulators or exchange compliance teams react, most of the damage is done.

In short, exchanges enable these tokens to trade freely – but only the community is sounding the alarm. Until greater scrutiny or regulations arrive, retail buyers must rely on sleuthing by researchers, on-chain trackers (like TokenSniffer reports of honeypot contracts), and media reports. As the co-founder of DeAgentAI cheerfully noted in PR: “This marks a pivotal milestone…” – and indeed it marks one for financial loss for many retail participants.

Conclusion: AI Hype, Human Losses

In the end, the latest “AI” tokens offer a cautionary lesson. Beneath futuristic branding lies a familiar playbook of crypto greed. The charts and data show not a technology revolution but the same old pump‑and‑dump sleight-of-hand: a few insiders spark a buying frenzy, regular investors get swept up, then the insiders unplug the hype. The sugar rush of supposed “AI-driven” features has repeatedly proven empty.

There is genuine work being done on decentralized AI infrastructure – but it looks nothing like these spindrift coins. For most of the projects discussed, actual code and use-cases were absent. Instead, we saw marketing smoke and mirrors (buzzwords, celebrity association) coinciding with market mania (wild volume spikes and crashes). As of November 2025, most of the tokens above are languishing far below their peaks. The retail investors who bought late are nursing losses.

Our advice? Look beyond the hype. If a token’s promises sound too dazzling – “AI agents”, “self-driving trading bots”, “rewards for AI data labeling” – treat it as a red flag, not a bullet point on a résumé. Check the smart contract, read the whitepaper critically, and remember: whenever you see “AI” in small‑cap crypto, it might just stand for “Artificially Inflated.”

Author

Denis Tabirca

Analyst

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