ATTN: SHIB Armies in the World
This is not drama.
This is not an attack.
This is a message from someone who believed—truly—in SHIB.
I carried the banner into cities and conferences where no one else would.
Voluntarily. Quietly. Proudly.
Not for clout. But for purpose.
Some remember me as the one who solidified to make SHIBCON happen in Bangkok.
Others know me from events where SHIB was honored—not because I was told to do it, but because I believed it deserved to be— as a general of SHIB Army.
And still, I stayed anon.
But today—I speak up. Not to shame, but to be heard.
Not to divide, but to remind us who we are.
⸻
Our project, $KIKI, was born to expand SHIB’s reach—to bring SHIB OS into the Solana ecosystem.
Before we launched, we were encouraged, promised, and supported by SHIB leadership.
So we went all in.
We didn’t launch a meme.
We bought a $1M IP with 12B views.
Built a team. Burned through sleepless nights.
All to represent SHIB with honor.
And it worked—at first.
$100M market cap in six days.
CEXs reached out.
SHIB OS publicly listed us as their Solana partner.
For a moment, it felt like we were truly one family.
But then… silence.
Our logo remains blurred.
The support promised? Never came.
No follow-up. No recognition. No accountability.
And yet—we never left.
We never dumped.
We never lied.
We never betrayed the people who believed in us.
We carried SHIB’s name even when others turned away.
⸻
So now I ask:
If a project does everything right—keeps its promises, protects its integrity, builds with loyalty—
Shouldn’t it be supported?
If an army had assembled first and fought for you—waiting for the alliance to be arrived as “Oath of alliance” aren’t we deserve to be acknowledged?
I’m not here to beg. I’m here to lead.
Because how we treat those who stay loyal in hard times… reveals who we really are.
$KIKI may be small. But we are still standing.
And we will keep building.
Because we believe in something bigger than ourselves.
⸻
To every SHIB holder reading this:
If this happened to you, would it feel just?
If your leaders made promises and went silent—would you call that right?
“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.”
— Martin Luther King Jr.
“The most terrible thing about injustice is not injustice itself, but that people accept it in silence.”
— Émile Zola
This is bigger than $KIKI now.
This is about the soul of SHIB.
Do we honor our word?
Do we fight for fairness?
Do we lift the ones who stand for us?
I still believe in SHIB.
That’s why I wrote this.
Not to cause noise—but to spark clarity.
And if you believe in truth, in justice, in something real—
Then maybe it’s time to walk with those who still carry the torch.
— A Loyal SHIB Knight
Founder of $KIKI