Ah, PEPE-a little green marvel, a meme coin with ambitions, and apparently, a penchant for inviting the cyber equivalent of pickpockets into your digital wallet. Recent whispers from the shadowy alleyways of the internet suggest that PEPE’s esteemed online abode has been compromised, thanks to an insidious charm known as a front-end attack. Guess what? Your coins could be evaporating faster than a snowman in July. 🌞💸
The Glorious Parade of Digital Thieves: PEPE’s Website Goes on a Joyride of Deceit
In a tweet (or as the cool kids call it, an X), the sagacious guardians at Blockaid-who watch the crypto realm like hawks in sunglasses-revealed that PEPE’s website has become a playground for a malicious code named Inferno Drainer. Picture it as a digital vampire, sucking coins right out of your virtual wallet, all while you happily click away, oblivious as a squirrel in traffic. This malware redirects visitors-yes, you and your shiny tokens-to a doppelgänger portal that looks just like the real deal, but with a sinister twist. Clicking on the phishing links there? That’s like signing a check for your entire bank account. Nice. 🦇🧛♂️

Blockaid’s elite squad of cyber Sherlocks spotted that Inferno Drainer was snooping around PEPE’s digital front door, a piece of malware so familiar it’s practically a recurring nightmare. Meanwhile, their official statement remains as elusive as Bigfoot, but one thing’s clear: keep your hands off that website until further notice, lest your coins become digital ghost stories. 👻
And oh, the irony: PEPE’s official X page now redirects you-rather unscrupulously-to a fake site named pe pedotvip instead of the original pe pedotcom. They’ve also been pushing a PEPE clone, which experts suspect is just another scammy rug pulled right out from under your virtual feet. Despite all this, PEPE’s value stubbornly refused to sink-gaining 4% before, surprise-crashing with the broader crypto market’s tantrum. The meme coin, once a sprightly leapfrog, has slumped over 75% YTD. A real ‘hoppy’ tragedy, if I may. 🐸💥
The Escalating Troupe of Inferno Drainer Conquests
This isn’t the first rodeo for Inferno Drainer. Earlier this year, the same malware waltzed onto CoinMarketCap’s front porch-prompting pop-ups that looked plausible enough to lure unwary users into a digital trap, draining wallets faster than a leaky bucket. Then, in October, the BNB Chain’s X account got its turn, peddling links that led victims to the dreaded Inferno toolkit, costing unsuspecting users around $8k each. The culprits? The same crew of digital marauders that have drained a staggering $80 million from Web3 victims. If crypto scams were a track record, these guys would be Olympic gold medalists. 🥇💀
At present, PEPE languishes at a modest $0.000004697-a penny for your thoughts, or indeed, your coins, which are down 3% in just one day-thanks to the market’s roller-coaster. Ah, the endless charm of cryptoland chaos! 🎢

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2025-12-05 19:53