When you hear MultiversX, a high-performance blockchain built for scalability and real-world use, originally launched as Elrond. Also known as Elrond 2.0, it’s designed to handle thousands of transactions per second with low fees—making it a serious player in DeFi and Web3 gaming. The MultiversX airdrop was one of the most structured token distributions in recent years, rewarding early users, validators, and community contributors with eGLD tokens. Unlike random meme coin giveaways, this wasn’t just a marketing stunt—it was tied to network participation, staking, and ecosystem development.
Related to this are eGLD, the native token of the MultiversX network, used for transactions, staking, and governance, and crypto airdrops, free token distributions given to users who meet specific criteria like holding assets, using dApps, or joining communities. These airdrops don’t happen randomly—they’re planned by teams to bootstrap adoption. MultiversX’s airdrops targeted users who ran nodes, staked eGLD, or used early dApps like Maiar Exchange or Xdefi Wallet. Many got tokens just for being active before mainnet launch. But here’s the catch: after the main airdrop phases ended in 2021–2022, most official distributions stopped. Now, any site claiming to offer a "new MultiversX airdrop" is almost certainly a scam. Fake airdrop pages copy the official logo, use fake countdown timers, and ask for your seed phrase. They don’t need your wallet to "claim"—they need it to steal.
What you’ll find below are real, verified posts about airdrops that actually delivered value—like the Radio Caca and WorldShards drops—and deep dives into how to spot fake ones. You’ll also see reviews of exchanges like SheepDex and EvmoSwap that pretend to be connected to real blockchains but are just vaporware. If you’re looking to earn tokens without falling for hype, these guides show you what works, what doesn’t, and how to protect your crypto. No fluff. No promises. Just what happened, what you can still do, and how to avoid losing money.