Justin Sun will save WLFI with $10 million?

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The crypto community been rocked again, this time starring World Liberty Financial.

A flashy token launch designed to light up wallets, but instead, it sparks confusion, suspicion, and a whole lotta finger-pointing.

Token dynamics

Justin Sun, the big boss of Tron, is right smack in the middle, promising ten million dollars to fix the mess and calm jittery investors.

But do the community really trust him? WLFI’s launch was anything but smooth. Retail investors, the everyday people, got the short end of the stick again,sound familiar?

Suspicious token moves triggered alarm bells, forcing WLFI to freeze Sun’s wallets.

The guy who’s supposed to be the project’s champion suddenly finds his own coin stash locked down.

Sun’s yelling, “Unfreeze my tokens!” like a scene from a gangster flick, claiming it’s all unreasonable.

Now, behind the curtain, industry experts say the token’s numbers tell a pretty twisted story.

The community was told 5% of tokens would be available, but only 4% hit the streets because some people didn’t use the lockbox.

Marketing and liquidity? Initially pegged at 1.6%, but actually 2.8% of the tokens were floating, bumping circulating supply to 6.8%.

Sneaky, right? Other portions, like the 10% ecosystem fund and a 7.8% pile for Alt5 Sigma, were unlocked but not on any vesting schedule, confusing price signals and messing with token dynamics.

Behind the scenes

Justin Sun owns 3% of WLFI, though only 20% of that was unlocked at launch. He said he won’t sell, swearing loyalty to the project’s grand vision.

But the token debuted at 20 cents with a billion-dollar market cap, and billions in trading volume poured in fast.

Instead of genuine market moves, the price dip felt mechanical, like someone running the puppet strings behind the scenes. Kinda sus.

So, what’s cooking? Quinten Francois of WeRate spills the beans, exchanges quietly unloaded part of that 2.8% liquidity stash, while Sun supposedly worked his HTX contacts, dangling a juicy 20% APY to lure people into staking WLFI.

This, guys, is classic hustle. Analysts say the likely script is that Sun gets to sell off his personal holdings under the radar while making it look like loyal investors are stacking chips.

When withdrawals happen, guess who’s fronting the cash? I guess you know the answer.

Early investors

Reports from Nansen and Arkham Intelligence tracked Sun moving about $9 million worth of WLFI tokens through HTX and Binance, the kind of moves that make watchdogs sniff out insider selling.

So WLFI put the brakes on Sun’s wallet using a crypto freeze button.

This move got the community buzzing, with some cheering the governance decision as a necessary block on Sun’s token pumping and dumping.

Not surprisingly, Sun’s not happy, arguing he deserves the same rights as early investors.

To cool things down, Sun doubled down, tweeting he views US-listed crypto stocks as a goldmine and pledged to personally pump another $10 million into WLFI.

Whether that’s smooth damage control or just smoke and mirrors?

The community’s reaction is quite mixed. It’s a tangled game out there, and the house maybe isn’t always fair.


Disclosure:This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

Kriptoworld.com accepts no liability for any errors in the articles or for any financial loss resulting from incorrect information.

András Mészáros
Written by András Mészáros
Cryptocurrency and Web3 expert, founder of Kriptoworld
LinkedIn | X (Twitter) | More articles

With years of experience covering the blockchain space, András delivers insightful reporting on DeFi, tokenization, altcoins, and crypto regulations shaping the digital economy.

📅 Published: September 9, 2025 • 🕓 Last updated: September 9, 2025
✉️ Contact: [email protected]

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