Back in April 2025, Frog Farm was loudly celebrating "230% gains in a single day" on BingX, urging followers to "get on the rocket." By May, the token had been delisted from that same exchange without warning, with the team blaming BingX for failing to communicate minimum deposit thresholds and giving no notice before pulling the plug. That whiplash arc tells you most of what you need to know about this channel.
Frog Farm is the official Telegram channel for the $FROG meme token project, which has gone through at least one full cycle of hype, collapse, and rebranding within a single year. The channel now promotes what it calls $FROG 2.0, a relaunch on the Solana blockchain, after the original token's CEX experiment ended badly. Posts arrive infrequently — sometimes weeks apart — with bursts of activity around announcements. There is no consistent editorial rhythm, no market analysis, and no third-party commentary.
The content leans heavily on community flattery and vague promises. Phrases like "the power is in the community," "a grand launch awaits you," and "we are preparing a revolution in the DEX market" appear repeatedly without specifics about tokenomics, vesting schedules, liquidity lock-ups, or audits. The July 2025 posts announcing $FROG 2.0 promise low capitalization at launch, top DEX rankings on day one, and English-language influencer support — claims that are standard promotional boilerplate in the meme coin space and carry no verifiable backing.
To be fair, the team did acknowledge its BingX failure publicly, which is more transparency than many similar projects offer. The pivot to DEX is at least logically consistent with the stated philosophy of decentralization. And the channel genuinely has over 2.3 million subscribers, which is a real asset in crypto where community size directly affects launch momentum — though how many of those followers are active, real users versus accumulated over years of low-engagement growth is impossible to tell from the outside.
What is missing is substance. There are no wallet addresses for team holdings, no tokenomics breakdown, no smart contract links, no independent audits mentioned. The educational posts sprinkled in — comparing DEX trading to Telegram bots, explaining on-chain analytics tools — feel like filler content rather than genuine value delivery. One post from late April still linked to BingX for $FROG purchases weeks before the delisting drama unfolded, which raises questions about how well the team monitors its own messaging.
The channel is aimed squarely at retail speculators who are already deep in meme coin culture and comfortable with high-risk, low-information bets. If you are that person and you want early access to a community-driven Solana meme launch, Frog Farm puts you in the loop. If you are looking for analysis, transparency, or any signal that the team has learned meaningful lessons from the BingX debacle beyond "CEX bad, DEX good," you will not find it here. Proceed with eyes open and position sizes you can afford to lose entirely.