There’s no verified EVA community airdrop from Evanesco Network - not now, not in the past few months, and not based on any official announcement. If you’ve seen a post, tweet, or Telegram group claiming you can claim free EVA tokens, you’re likely looking at a scam. The truth is simple: EVA has no active airdrop, no public claim portal, and no community distribution event underway.
Evanesco Network launched in May 2021 with its native token EVA, built as an EVM-compatible privacy layer for Web3. It’s designed to hide transaction routes across chains, offering what it calls a "privacy fortress" for financial contracts. The token is an ERC-20 on Ethereum, with contract address 0xd6cAF5Bd23CF057f5FcCCE295Dcc50C01C198707. Sounds promising? Maybe. But here’s the catch: no major exchange lists it. No liquidity pool has meaningful volume. And no airdrop has ever been confirmed.
As of September 2025, EVA’s market cap hovered around $10,260. The price? Around $0.0001. Some trackers show $0.0000445. Others say it’s "awaiting listing." Trading volume? Often listed as zero. On Blockchain.com, the last 24-hour volume was $10 - that’s less than what a single tweet thread can generate in fake hype. With only 2,655 holders, this isn’t a thriving community. It’s a ghost town with a whitepaper.
So why do people still talk about an EVA airdrop? Because scammers are good at copying names. They take the word "EVA," slap on "airdrop," and create fake websites that look real. They’ll ask you to connect your wallet. They’ll say you need to pay a small gas fee to "unlock" your tokens. They’ll even send you a fake claim link that looks like it’s from Evanesco Network. Once you sign, they drain your wallet. No tokens. No refund. Just empty funds.
Here’s how to tell the real from the fake:
Some crypto projects run airdrops to build early adoption. They distribute tokens to people who held a certain coin, joined their Telegram, or used their testnet. Evanesco Network never did any of that. There’s no public snapshot date. No claim window. No official announcement on Medium, their blog, or any crypto news site like CoinDesk or The Block.
And here’s something important: if EVA had a real airdrop, it would be all over crypto Twitter and Reddit. People would be posting screenshots of their claims. Wallet explorers would show spikes in transfers. But there’s nothing. Zero activity. Zero chatter. Just silence.
What about future airdrops? Maybe. But right now, there’s no evidence. No roadmap update. No team announcement. The project hasn’t posted anything new since 2022. The website is static. The GitHub repo is barely updated. This isn’t a project in growth mode - it’s in maintenance mode, if that.
If you want to hold EVA, you can buy it on Blockchain.com or through peer-to-peer trades. But you’re buying into a token with no liquidity, no exchange support, and no community momentum. You’re not getting free tokens. You’re paying for something that might never go anywhere.
Don’t fall for the hype. Don’t click on "Claim Your EVA Airdrop Now!" buttons. Don’t trust influencers who post about it without proof. The only safe move is to walk away. Wait for an official announcement from Evanesco Network - and even then, verify it three times before touching your wallet.
For now, EVA is a ghost token. And there’s no airdrop - only ghosts.
Robin Hilton
November 6, 2025 AT 01:30But nope. Same script. Same scam. Same wallets getting drained. Sad.