Solana Memecoin Platform Pump.fun Faces X Suspensions Amid Regulatory Speculation

By José Oramas June 18, 2025 In Pump.fun, Regulation, Solana
  • X suspended Solana meme coin launchpad Pump.fun and its co-founder without clear explanation, along with 19 other crypto accounts, sparking backlash from the memecoin community
  • However, this comes as Pump.fun continues to see more legal scrutiny for enabling rapid low-effort token launches and is currently involved in a class-action lawsuit alleging it profited from unregistered, high-risk assets.
  • The platform is reportedly planning a token sale targeting US$1B in funding and a US$4B valuation.

X swung the axe against Solana’s biggest meme coin launchpad, Pump.fun.

On Monday, the social media platform suspended the platform as well as its co-founder Alon Cohen, without explanation, except for the boilerplate notice that they had violated “X Rules”. 

But no details, no elaboration. The account is back on now, but it did hit a nerve as X is considered crypto’s main comms hub, so the sudden removal of core accounts can be painful for memecoin traders and founders.

These platforms rely on visibility and real-time communication to engage users, announce listings, and pump liquidity. Obviously, stripping their access cuts straight into their operational lifeline.

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It wasn’t just Pump.fun: at least 19 other crypto-affiliated accounts also vanished, according to a compiled list shared by the X user “Otto”. This includes trading platforms GMGN, BullX, Bloom Trading, and Eliza OS. The majority of these accounts are back on again.

Platform Back Online But Many Questions Remain

Pump.fun remains online for now, but a lot of speculation is brewing considering how much heat the platform has drawn for months, mostly for enabling a nonstop churn of low-effort tokens with questionable mechanics. 

On the legal front, the platform is not having a lot of fun either (pun intended). Earlier this year, it was named in a class-action lawsuit claiming it profited massively, reportedly close to US$500M (AU$772M) from “unregistered, high-risk digital assets”.

Back in February, Pump.fun’s X account was hacked and used to push phony tokens, so its reputation is not getting any better.

Related: Saylor Gets Ready for Yet Another Bitcoin Buy while Metaplanet Makes Large Purchase

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More recently, a report from Blockworks citing anonymous sources stated that Pump.fun aims to sell its own token in a raise targeting US$1B (AU$1.54B), with an eye on a US$4B (AU$6.17B) valuation. The structure and terms of that sale remain unclear, which is more fuel to speculation around potential regulatory entanglements.

José Oramas
Author

José Oramas

José is a journalist and translator with a keen interest in blockchain and cryptocurrencies.

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