When a crypto exchange project wraps up its gamified tap-to-earn mechanic and hands off airdrop responsibilities to a partner platform, it tells you something important about where its priorities actually lie. That transition — from Cedex Tap to BeCexy — is arguably the defining story of this channel over the past several months, and it shapes almost everything posted here.
CEDEX positions itself as a streamlined crypto exchange platform at cedex.io, promising users "more options and better rates for seamless crypto swaps." The Telegram channel, however, has functioned less as a product showcase and more as a community management hub for a Telegram-native tap game. Posts throughout 2025 have been dominated by bot cleanup announcements, airdrop pre-qualification steps, snapshot notifications, and reminders to earn CDXP tokens before deadlines. The game officially concluded in late October 2025, with all player data transferred to the BeCexy team — a move that effectively outsources the most engagement-heavy part of the channel's identity.
What remains is a biweekly YouTube spotlight series, which is genuinely the most consistent and arguably the most useful content here. Topics range from MetaMask setup guides for beginners to zkEVM rollups on Ethereum, NFT-based wildlife conservation, and yield farming risks on Aave and Uniswap. The breadth is commendable, even if the depth of each post is shallow — these are essentially three-sentence teasers designed to drive YouTube traffic rather than deliver standalone value on Telegram.
There is also an occasional "Request Token for Exchange" post, inviting users to vote on which coins get listed on cedex.io. It is a clever community engagement mechanic, though it appears infrequently and lacks follow-up reporting on results.
The channel's subscriber count — over 1.4 million — is almost certainly inflated by the tap game, which notoriously attracts large audiences chasing airdrop rewards rather than genuine interest in the underlying product. The team itself acknowledges this, having run multiple bot-cleanup rounds before the final snapshot.
Who is this for? Right now, it is in an awkward transitional phase. Former tap game players are waiting on airdrop news from BeCexy, not CEDEX. New users looking for a crypto exchange community will find sparse product-focused content. The YouTube digest posts are decent for casual crypto learners, but they are not a reason alone to subscribe to a Telegram channel with 1.4 million accounts.
If CEDEX follows through on its stated pivot toward product development and exchange growth, this channel could become genuinely useful. For now, it reads more like a project catching its breath after a gamification sprint — with real potential but a content strategy that has not yet caught up to its new direction.