It all started with a joke.
A post by UniPCS claiming that in the next bull market, all you had to do was call a meme coin "Stupid" and add "Inu" to reach a $100 million market cap.
Most people laughed.
Someone decided to launch it.
Someone decided to turn it into a scam.
> Nearly ten months ago, Stupid Inu was born.
> Not from a vision.
> Not from revolutionary technology.
> Not from some master plan.
> But from an idea so ridiculous that it should have never worked.
The creators promoted the token.
People started buying.
The market cap grew quickly.
$1 million.
$3 million.
$5 million.
Eventually reaching nearly $9 million.
It looked like the beginning of something.
In reality, it was the beginning of the end.
The creators started selling.
The community started asking questions.
"Be patient."
"Weβre working on it."
"Big things are coming."
For days they made excuses.
For days the community believed them.
Until the truth became impossible to ignore.
> They were scamming us.
The rational choice was to sell.
The rational choice was to leave.
The rational choice was to forget the whole thing.
Thatβs how these stories usually end.
The founders disappear.
The holders sell.
The community dies.
But this time something different happened.
Some people stayed.
Not because it was profitable.
Not because success was guaranteed.
They stayed because somehow they had become attached to something that should have never existed.
A meme.
A stupid dog.
A community of strangers spread across the world.
And to them, it was worth saving.
The most ironic part?
The scammers were right about one thing.
The word "Stupid" got peopleβs attention.
But they were wrong about the thing that mattered most.
They thought the community was stupid.
They never imagined the community would be the one to take control of the project.
The community didnβt leave.
It stayed.
And it decided to reclaim Stupid Inu.
More and more people realized that the problem was never the meme.
The problem was the creators.
So a decision was made.
We would not abandon Stupid Inu.
We would build Stupid Inu.
No funding.
No founders.
No guarantees.
Just a community refusing to give up.
The story could have ended there.
But it didnβt.
Months later, the same people who abandoned Stupid Inu tried to come back.
A new token.
The same name.
They thought the community would follow them once again.
They were wrong.
This time the community knew exactly who they were.
This time nobody believed their promises.
The community rejected them.
Exposed them.
Boycotted them.
Because Stupid Inu no longer belonged to its creators.
It belonged to the people who stayed.
Every meme posted.
Every post shared.
Every new holder.
Every hour spent building.
Everything came from the community.
There were no founders to follow.
No investors to impress.
No one coming to save Stupid Inu.
Just ordinary people who refused to let it die.
Most communities would have walked away.
Ours decided to stay.
Stupid Inu is not a success story.
Not yet.
We are still fighting to make people aware of the project.
We are still building.
We are still fighting against the idea that a rug pull has to be the end of the story.
Maybe we will fail.
Maybe we will succeed.
Nobody knows.
But one thing is certain.
Nearly ten months after the scammers tried to kill it, Stupid Inu is still here.
Not because of the founders.
Because of the community.
This is not a story about brilliant founders.
This is not a story about venture capital.
This is not a story about perfect marketing.
It is a story about ordinary people who refused to let something they believed in die.
This is not a request for trust.
This is not a promise.
It is simply the true story of Stupid Inu.
Judge us by what we do today.
Not by what the scammers did yesterday.
A coin born from a scam.
A community born from resistance.
And the story continues.
@Stupid_Inu_CTO