When you hear about a LEPA airdrop, a free token distribution tied to a little-known project often promoted on social media. Also known as LEPA token drop, it’s usually a marketing stunt with no real team, no whitepaper, and no working product. Most of these claims are designed to get you to connect your wallet, click a link, or share personal info—none of which leads to free crypto, but all of which can lead to stolen funds.
Scammers love using names like LEPA because they sound like real projects—short, catchy, and vaguely techy. But look closer: if there’s no official website, no verified Twitter or Telegram, and no exchange listing, it’s not an airdrop. It’s a trap. Real airdrops like the BNC airdrop, a structured token distribution by Bifrost on LBank and KuCoin in March 2025 had clear rules, public timelines, and exchange partnerships. The SNE airdrop, a legitimate giveaway by StrongNode Edge with 6,666 tokens for 5,000 winners was documented on their official site. LEPA? No such luck.
And it’s not just LEPA. You’ve probably seen similar names: LESS Network, SafeLaunch SFEX, Recharge Incentive Drop—all flagged as scams in our posts. These fake airdrops use the same playbook: urgency, fake influencers, and a link that asks for your seed phrase. They don’t want your time. They want your crypto. Even if the site looks professional, if it’s not linked from a verified exchange or blockchain project, walk away. Real projects don’t need you to "claim" tokens by signing weird transactions. They send them to your wallet—no action needed.
So what should you do? Check if the project has a public team, a GitHub repo, or a listing on CoinMarketCap or CoinGecko. If it doesn’t, it’s not real. If someone tells you "LEPA is going to explode," ask why they’re pushing it—and why they’re not holding it themselves. The truth? Most of these tokens are worthless before they even launch. And if you’ve already clicked on a link? Check your wallet balance. Look for unusual approvals. Revoke access to any unknown contracts. Protect your assets before it’s too late.
Below, you’ll find real cases of fake airdrops, how they tricked users, and what to watch for next time. No fluff. No hype. Just facts from people who’ve seen this play out too many times.
Posted By Tristan Valehart On 8 Dec 2025 Comments (17)
The Lepasa Polqueen NFT airdrop in 2022 distributed 3,240 3D game-ready avatars to early community members. These NFTs grant access to land and rewards in the Lepasa Metaverse, tied to the $LEPA token and ALBP power system.
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