Imagine opening a channel that bills itself as a Telegram game rankings and app discovery hub — then finding almost every recent post is an aggressive pitch for a single crypto token called IEM (Interstellar Exploration Mission). That gap between promise and reality is the defining feature of TAppPark.
On paper, TAppPark was conceived as a directory-style resource for Telegram mini-apps and games: new game rankings, editors' picks, a coin exchange tracker, and a blacklist of fraudulent projects. It is the kind of utility channel that genuinely fills a need, given how chaotic the Telegram mini-app ecosystem has become since TON-based tap-to-earn games exploded in popularity. With over 1.3 million subscribers, it clearly attracted a massive audience on that premise.
In practice, however, the content feed tells a very different story. Scrolling through recent posts, virtually everything published since mid-2025 is dedicated to promoting IEM tokens — an IPO launch on the TON chain, NFT dividend schemes, referral pyramids promising "10x+" returns, and breathless countdowns designed to manufacture urgency. The language is a textbook crypto hype playbook: "FOMO hits hard," "LFG to cosmic wealth peaks," "miss this and regret forever." Posts arrive sporadically — sometimes weeks apart — and nearly all of them are pinned announcements for the same project.
The red flags here are hard to ignore. The IEM promotional posts promise guaranteed doubling of investment at IPO, "100% refund" NFT schemes contingent on recruiting two friends, and "permanent dividends" for NFT holders — structures that closely resemble multi-level referral programs. The channel's own stated purpose — maintaining a blacklist of scam projects — makes the irony particularly sharp.
What is genuinely missing is the core product the channel once advertised. There are no recent game rankings, no editors' choice features, no app discovery content. Whether the original concept was abandoned, the account was acquired, or it simply pivoted entirely into token promotion is unclear from the public feed alone.
For anyone who subscribed hoping for a curated guide to Telegram games and mini-apps, TAppPark delivers almost nothing of value today. For crypto speculators, the content reads less like informed analysis and more like promotional material from the IEM project itself. The subscriber count of 1.3 million is a legacy figure — a reminder of what the channel used to represent rather than a reflection of its current credibility.
The verdict: skip it. If you need Telegram game discovery resources, look elsewhere. If you are evaluating IEM as an investment, treat everything in this channel as marketing copy, not independent coverage — and apply the same skepticism the channel's own blacklist feature was supposedly designed to encourage in others.