$gmfam got spammed, attacked and panic sold, and our mcap declined all the way
Why?
Today we got attacked by community because they dont understand the MEV issues
@cz_binance has pointed out about it, good teams shall explain it @tutorialtoken@four_meme_
But lets breakdown the issue we faced 👇🏻👇🏻👇🏻👇🏻👇🏻👇🏻
Help us get our voice loud
@Dr_good_tiger @cz_binance@tutorialtoken@four_meme_ It happened to all and will continue to happen
What happened to us is the fud causing people to sell from kols that understands nothing
$gmfam got spammed, attacked and panic sold, and our mcap declined all the way
Why?
Today we got attacked by community because they dont understand the MEV issues
@cz_binance has pointed out about it, good teams shall explain it @tutorialtoken@four_meme_
But lets breakdown the issue we faced 👇🏻👇🏻👇🏻👇🏻👇🏻👇🏻
Help us get our voice loud
@cz_binance Today we got attacked by community, looking into sell wallets from the mev side, and caused panic sell.
Bnb need solutions to reduce it and educate communities
[11/]
DeFi is wild.
And if you’re not aware of how MEV bots, flashloans, and contract-level trading works — you’ll keep misreading the chain.
Let’s be better.
Let’s protect good projects from misinformation.
And let memes cook.
Can you @tutorialtoken@ChainTalkDaily explain those concept with videos?
#GMFAM #CryptoEducation #BNB #MEV
[6/]
So both sides — buyers and sellers — were MEV bots.
It’s not a scam.
It’s not a rug.
It’s just DeFi being DeFi.
Bots don’t care about your roadmap.
They care about one thing:
Extracting value from human trades.
10/
TL;DR:
•MEV bots bought and sold $GMFAM
•They’re not holders, insiders, or devs
•They exploited launch momentum to extract profit
•This doesn’t mean $GMFAM is a scam — it means it had real activity
FUD dies in the face of facts.
[5/]
And it gets better:
Even the big buyers were MEV bots.
•0x36e6...cff4 bought ~$30K
•0xc94a...9023 bought ~$8K
Why?
To set up front-running or sandwich attacks.
They’re not “believers” in the meme — they’re there to farm your hype.
[4/]
These are MEV bots.
They scan the mempool, see opportunities, and do crazy things like:
•Borrow tokens temporarily (flashswaps)
•Sell them into your buys
•Take profit in WBNB
•Disappear with zero token exposure
It’s all contract-to-contract, in seconds.
[3/]
Let’s look at the wallets people are pointing fingers at for dumping $GMFAM:
•0x5a56...9c8 sold ~$23K
•0x8848...8432 sold ~$12K
No buy history. No connections to the devs.
So how did they sell?
Simple: they didn’t own $GMFAM — they borrowed it and dumped it instantly.
⸻
[2/]
The truth is: many meme coins suffer early because of poor on-chain awareness.
People don’t understand how trading bots behave, how contracts interact, or how to read real vs. fake token flow.
What looks like a “dev dumping” is often just a smart contract arbitraging a few blocks.
[1/]
There’s a lot of FUD around $GMFAM.
People are quick to cry “rug” or “devs dumped” — but what they’re really seeing is just MEV bots doing their thing.
Let’s clear this up with facts.
Because lack of technical understanding shouldn’t kill good memes.
A thread:
⸻