Crypto market update: Vitalik Buterin Just Compared Pump.fun to FTX—And That’s Not Even the Worst Part

    Vitalik Buterin slams Pump.fun and likens it to dystopian tech—what does this mean for crypto’s future?

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    Updated Apr 13, 2025 5:13 PM GMT+0
    Crypto market update: Vitalik Buterin Just Compared Pump.fun to FTX—And That’s Not Even the Worst Part

    Vitalik Buterin has never been shy about his beliefs, but his latest comments just shook crypto Twitter. In a blunt takedown, the Ethereum co-founder placed Pump.fun—Solana’s infamous meme coin factory—alongside crypto catastrophes like FTX and Terra/Luna.

    Yes, you read that right.

    For Buterin, the rise of low-effort, high-noise platforms like Pump.fun isn’t just a passing annoyance—it’s a real threat to the integrity of decentralized finance.

    And things get even more surreal when Black Mirror enters the chat.

    A Meme Coin Factory Turned Dark Comedy?

    Pump.fun, known for churning out viral meme coins at lightning speed, has become crypto’s version of reality TV gone wrong. But now, it’s crossing over into fiction—with disturbing accuracy.

    The first episode of Black Mirror’s latest season, titled “Common People,” features a storyline that feels eerily familiar. In it, a man degrades himself on a live website called Dum Dummies in exchange for digital tokens—desperate to buy a better life-support tier for his wife.

    Crypto users immediately saw the parallel. On Pump.fun, creators have gone viral for pulling dangerous stunts to pump their meme coins. The satire, it seems, isn’t far from reality.

    Buterin Isn’t Laughing

    In a recent post on Warpcast, Buterin didn’t hold back. He warned that “bad applications” like Pump.fun risk derailing Ethereum’s purpose entirely.

    “Apps are ~80% special purpose,” he said. “What apps you build depends heavily on what ideas you have of what Ethereum apps are there to do for the world.”

    That’s where social philosophy comes in. According to Buterin, crypto builders must think deeper—beyond the memes, beyond the hype—and ask: what are we actually building?

    He’s long advocated for “higher-quality fun”—projects that contribute meaningfully while staying creative. But Pump.fun, in his view, represents the opposite.

    A Lineup of Infamy

    By mentioning Pump.fun in the same breath as FTX and Luna, Buterin places it in a hall of shame reserved for the worst of crypto. Not for fraud or collapse, but for something more abstract: moral decay.

    It’s no longer just about financial loss. It’s about the industry’s image, direction, and what kind of culture we’re incentivizing.

    Sure, Pump.fun recently reinstated its live-streaming feature (after pausing it due to backlash). But is that a comeback or a warning sign?

    Conclusion: When Satire Becomes Reality

    Vitalik’s words are a call to arms for developers and users alike. Pump.fun might seem like harmless fun, but when a Black Mirror episode mirrors real-life meme coin antics, it’s time to reflect.

    Because if we’re not careful, crypto won’t just look dystopian—it will become it.

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