A staking contract with a project was hacked. According to on-chain data, the attacker still controls 36 million tokens, and the value of the project's tokens has already halved.
What's even more interesting is that, through fund tracking, it can be seen that the address used by the hacker was the earliest to receive funds injected from Tornado Cash. This transaction chain is clearly recorded on the blockchain, from the mixer’s fund flow to the final transfer to the attacker's address, making the entire process transparent.
With such a large amount of tokens in the hacker's hands, the market is still watching their next move—whether they will sell or continue to hold. This incident also serves as a reminder to project teams that smart contract security audits are crucial.
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TokenStorm
· 7h ago
Now the show begins. What will happen if 36 million chips are dumped? I bet they will choose the most painful way to do it.
The Tornado link is so obvious that on-chain forensic experts are starting to get excited.
Another project with poor auditing. I saw it coming a long time ago, but I still took a shot at the high average price.
Hackers are now the eye of the storm. We're all betting on when they'll dump their holdings. This feels incredibly exciting.
A one-time dump of 36 million tokens—no exchange can handle that, right? The testing data this time will look very interesting.
Actually, the real question is, with such a big hole, what were all the previous audit reports for?
Holding positions or selling out—it's all about whether the counterparty has a sucker to take the trade. I smell the aroma of arbitrage.
It's Tornado again, smart contracts again, and a sharp plunge—this cycle has truly begun, friends.
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GasFeeTears
· 7h ago
Another smart contract disaster site, where is the audit?
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MrDecoder
· 7h ago
It's another failed audit; why does this keep happening every time?
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ClassicDumpster
· 8h ago
Another contract vulnerability, and this time the scale is not small
Hackers are still holding chips, probably going to dump the market
The clue from Tornado is too obvious, nothing on the chain can be hidden
That's why it's important to find a reliable audit, don't just look for cheap options
36 million tokens are hanging there, I bet he will dump
Will New Year's Day 2026 be so exciting?
A staking contract with a project was hacked. According to on-chain data, the attacker still controls 36 million tokens, and the value of the project's tokens has already halved.
What's even more interesting is that, through fund tracking, it can be seen that the address used by the hacker was the earliest to receive funds injected from Tornado Cash. This transaction chain is clearly recorded on the blockchain, from the mixer’s fund flow to the final transfer to the attacker's address, making the entire process transparent.
With such a large amount of tokens in the hacker's hands, the market is still watching their next move—whether they will sell or continue to hold. This incident also serves as a reminder to project teams that smart contract security audits are crucial.