MELX price: What it is, where to track it, and why most listings are fake

When you search for MELX, a cryptocurrency token that appears on some exchange listings but has no blockchain presence or community. Also known as MELX coin, it's one of hundreds of fake tokens created to trick traders into checking prices that don't exist. There's no wallet, no contract address, no mining, and no team behind it. If you see a chart showing MELX price moving up or down, it's either a bot-generated fake or a scam site trying to steal your attention—and maybe your wallet info.

Real crypto tokens like xSUSHI, a staking token from SushiSwap that earns fees from trading volume or Vision (VSN), Bitpanda’s utility token for trading discounts and asset tokenization have public block explorers, active communities, and verifiable development. MELX has none of that. It’s a ghost. You can’t buy it. You can’t stake it. You can’t even withdraw it if you somehow got it. The same pattern shows up with other fake tokens like Intexcoin (INTX), a dead token with zero circulating supply and Golden Magfi (GMFI), a token with $0 market cap despite exchange listings. These aren’t mistakes—they’re designed to look real so you’ll click, check the price, and maybe even enter your private key.

Scammers rely on one thing: curiosity. If you see "MELX price up 200% today!" and you’re not sure if it’s real, you’ll click. That’s the trap. Real crypto moves on verified networks, not on sketchy sites with no domain history. Always check if a token has a live blockchain explorer, a GitHub repo, or even a Twitter account with real engagement. If it doesn’t, it’s not a coin—it’s a mirage. The posts below show you exactly how to spot these fakes, what real tokens look like, and how to protect yourself from losing time—or money—to tokens that never existed.