DogeMoon vs Dog•Go•To•The•Moon: What's Real and What's a Scam

When you see a coin named DogeMoon, a meme token that surfaced in 2023 with no official team or roadmap, it’s easy to think it’s just another spin on Dogecoin. But then you stumble across Dog•Go•To•The•Moon, a nearly identical name used in phishing sites and fake airdrop pages. These two aren’t brothers—they’re enemies. One is a low-liquidity meme coin with a tiny, quiet group of holders. The other is a digital trap, designed to steal your seed phrase under the guise of free tokens.

Scammers don’t just copy names—they copy tactics. They use the same emojis, the same Telegram groups, the same fake Twitter threads claiming you can claim 10 million tokens by connecting your wallet. They even reuse the same website templates from dead projects like FEAR Token, a 2021 airdrop that vanished without a trace. If you’ve ever seen a post saying "Dog•Go•To•The•Moon is launching on BSC" with a link that asks for your private key, you’ve seen the scam. Real meme coins don’t need you to "claim" tokens before you even own them. They don’t have billboards in Times Square or "holiday airdrops" that require you to follow 10 influencers. The Position Exchange Times Square billboard airdrop, a known fraud proved that even flashy ads can’t make a fake token real.

Here’s the truth: DogeMoon has a contract address, a few hundred holders, and zero marketing budget. It trades on small DEXs like PancakeSwap, with volume under $5,000 a day. Dog•Go•To•The•Moon? It doesn’t exist on any blockchain as a legitimate token. Every site promoting it is a front. It’s a phishing page disguised as a wallet connector. It’s a fake airdrop portal that steals your crypto the second you click "Approve". You don’t need to be a crypto expert to spot the difference. Check the contract address. Look for community chatter on Reddit or Twitter. If no one’s talking about it except for ads, it’s a ghost. If the website looks like it was made in 2021 with Canva, it’s a trap. The same people running Dog•Go•To•The•Moon scams also pushed fake airdrops for Sonar Holiday, a non-existent Solana project and TRO (Trodl), a token with no airdrop, no team, and no future. They recycle the same playbook.

Below, you’ll find real breakdowns of tokens that looked like winners but turned out to be dead ends—like Boys Club, Built Different, and Coinrate. You’ll also see how real airdrops like PLAYA3ULL and GEMS NFT actually work. If you’ve ever lost time—or crypto—to a fake dog coin, this collection will save you from the next one. Don’t guess. Know the difference before you click.