If you’re researching AGAI at 0x6738757a0a90b2133291f370eebed7282d4358f9, here’s the bottom line: there’s no active, verifiable token at this exact address on BNB Chain based on a direct check of BscScan. That means you shouldn’t assume this address maps to a tradable token without additional proof.
Why this matters: token tickers like “AGAI” are reused across multiple chains and projects. For example, you’ll find AI-themed tickers on Ethereum, Base, and BNB Chain—sometimes with similar names but entirely different contracts. The only thing that truly identifies a token is its contract address on a specific chain.
What we found (and didn’t)
- A direct search on BscScan for 0x6738…f9 doesn’t show a live, recognized token contract.
- Possibilities:
- The address is not a token (it could be a wallet, multisig, or a non-ERC-20/BEP-20 contract).
- The project was short-lived or delisted.
- The token lives on a different network, and the BNB Chain address is a mistake.
- Separate AI/AGAI-like projects exist on other chains, which can confuse research if you rely on tickers or names alone.
Quick verification checklist (5 minutes)
Use this workflow before you trade or add any token to your wallet:
Confirm the chain
Check token metadata on the explorer
- Name, symbol, decimals, total supply, and holder count.
- Is the contract “Verified”? If the source code isn’t verified, proceed carefully.
Review holder distribution
- Look for top holders and team/treasury wallets.
- Red flag: One or two wallets controlling most of the supply or liquidity.
Inspect liquidity and DEX pools
- Search for liquidity pools on popular DEXs. On BNB Chain, try PancakeSwap by pasting the exact contract address. On Ethereum, check Uniswap similarly.
- Verify if liquidity is locked and for how long. No lock = higher rug risk.
Scan for restrictive code
- Excessive transfer taxes, blacklist/whitelist functions, or trading toggles can be used to trap buyers.
- If available, review the Read/Write functions and recent transactions.
Validate official links
- Website, X (Twitter), Telegram/Discord, documentation. Do the links on the explorer match what’s posted on socials?
- Beware of lookalike sites and fake “official” channels.
Confirm real trading activity
- Sustainable volume over time is more meaningful than a single spike.
- Check for a healthy spread and slippage. If you need unusually high slippage just to buy, stop and reassess.
How to approach trading (if and only if you verify first)
If you’ve independently verified that AGAI is legitimate and there’s real liquidity, you can monitor and trade it on reputable tools and DEXs. Include these in your toolkit:
- GMGN token page for alerts, wallet flows, and analytics: https://gmgn.ai/eth/token/fV1R5sZ5_0x6738757a0a90b2133291f370eebed7282d4358f9
- PancakeSwap (for BNB Chain) or Uniswap (for Ethereum): always paste the exact contract address you verified to avoid impostors.
- The chain’s explorer (e.g., BscScan, Etherscan) for live on-chain data and contract verification.
Pro tip: Never search by ticker alone on a DEX. Paste the contract address you trust, double-check the token name and decimals, and compare against the explorer’s metadata.
Why “AGAI” can be confusing
- Ticker re-use: “AGAI” appears across different chains and projects (some AI-themed, some not).
- Zero-volume clones: Some contracts exist but never trade, giving a false impression of “being listed.”
- Chain mismatch: A token can be active on one chain and nonexistent on another, even with the same name.
Red flags to watch
- Unverified contract code.
- Trading enabled long after deployment or toggled frequently.
- High or variable transfer taxes.
- Centralized mint/burn privileges without time locks or multi-sig control.
- No liquidity lock or team-controlled LP tokens.
- Inconsistent or newly created social accounts with aggressive shill behavior.
If you already hold a token called “AGAI”
- Verify that your wallet’s “custom token” matches the intended chain and exact contract address.
- Compare your token’s contract to the one listed on the project’s official channels.
- If there’s a mismatch or you can’t find official confirmation, treat it as suspect until proven otherwise.
Key links
- Address on BNB Chain explorer: 0x6738757a0a90b2133291f370eebed7282d4358f9
- Trading and analytics toolkit (AGAI page): https://gmgn.ai/eth/token/fV1R5sZ5_0x6738757a0a90b2133291f370eebed7282d4358f9
- BNB Chain explorer home: BscScan
- Ethereum explorer home: Etherscan
Bottom line: At the time of writing, there’s no confirmed BNB Chain token at 0x6738757a0a90b2133291f370eebed7282d4358f9. If you encounter claims to the contrary, demand hard evidence on-chain. Use explorers to verify, DEX tools to confirm real liquidity, and analytics platforms to track flows—then size risk accordingly.