A fake Toyota giveaway promising 1,000 brand-new Corolla cars. That single post from October 31, 2025, tells you almost everything you need to know about what BFDCoin Community has become — a channel that once pitched itself as a legitimate crypto mining project and has since devolved into a clearinghouse for scam advertisements.
BFDCoin launched with the familiar playbook of tap-to-earn Telegram mini-apps, positioning itself around "Phase 1 fair mining" and building what appears to be an enormous audience — over 1.3 million subscribers. The early posts show genuine project activity: airdrop announcements, exchange listings, staking programs with TON rewards, and even a December 2024 notice acknowledging that a partner had set up a fake exchange and defrauded users. That transparency moment was notable, but it did not signal a course correction.
What followed tells a grimmer story. The channel's feed from mid-2025 onward is almost entirely third-party spam: repeated posts for "AI-Miner" promising 3% daily returns and free 1,000 GH/s bonuses, a "FaucetEarner" scheme claiming users can earn 10 XRP per minute, a "USplit" platform guaranteeing $1,000 daily, and an "EasyCash" bot dangling $200 for watching videos. These are textbook crypto and cash-reward scams, the kind that cycle through compromised or monetized Telegram channels. Posting frequency has also collapsed — from multiple posts per week in late 2024 to roughly one post per month by mid-2025, with large gaps in between.
The December 2024 staking announcement is worth examining closely. It required users to hold TON in their accounts and pay a 0.5 TON withdrawal fee — a structure that mirrors known fee-extraction schemes. Combined with the earlier admission that a partner ran a fraudulent exchange, the pattern is difficult to interpret charitably.
What works: The channel did build a massive community, and the early project communications were reasonably detailed. The acknowledgment of the fake exchange incident showed at least some awareness of accountability.
What doesn't: The content is now almost entirely scam advertising. The original project appears dormant or abandoned. There is no meaningful community discussion, no development updates, and no editorial filter on what gets posted. A channel with 1.3 million subscribers posting Toyota car giveaway phishing links is not a community — it is a liability.
This channel is not recommended for anyone. If you participated in the BFDCoin mining game expecting a token payout, the evidence in these posts suggests that outcome is unlikely. If you are evaluating it as a source of crypto information or investment ideas, the current content is actively dangerous. Steer clear.