Quick takeaways
- A search on Basescan for 0x855e989aefa70fc0fce82eb5b119cf0ac6713f87 did not surface an identifiable token contract as of November 20, 2025.
- This could mean the address is not a token, is incorrect, or the token is too new and not indexed yet.
- Until a contract is verifiably published, critical facts like total supply, holders, and liquidity remain unknown.
- There are unrelated “Seeker” projects (especially on Solana) that can cause confusion; details below.
What our research found
We looked up the contract address 0x855e989aefa70fc0fce82eb5b119cf0ac6713f87 on Basescan.org and performed broader web searches (“SEEKER token Base chain,” the address itself, and variations). No verified token entry or public project page matched this address on the Base network.
When a block explorer does not show a token contract:
- It may be a non-token smart contract (for example, a wallet or a custom app).
- The address could be wrong or mistyped.
- The token might be newly deployed and not indexed or publicized yet.
Without an explorer-confirmed token, we cannot confirm essentials like token supply, decimals, ownership, tax settings, or whether liquidity exists.
Avoiding name confusion: other “Seeker” mentions
Several unrelated “Seeker” items commonly appear in search results:
- Solana Seeker (Web3 mobile device): A product by Solana Mobile with a “Seeker Genesis Token” (soulbound) and “SKR Token,” all on the Solana network.
- Video game collectibles: “Seeker’s Tokens” in Dragon’s Dogma and Dragon’s Dogma 2.
- Cybersecurity tool: “Seeker” on GitHub for phone location via social engineering.
These are not related to a Base-chain token at the address above.
How to verify a token on Base (step-by-step)
If you come across any claim about SEEKER on Base, do this before interacting:
Confirm the address on Basescan
- Open the address on Basescan.
- Check if the “Contract” tab shows a verified source and whether it’s an ERC-20 token contract.
Check token metadata
- Look for token name, symbol, decimals, and total supply in the token view.
- Verify holders and recent transactions. Sudden spikes with few holders may indicate risk.
Inspect ownership and permissions
- See if the contract owner has renounced ownership or retains high-risk permissions (like changing fees or blacklisting).
- Review common functions (setTax, setMaxTx, blacklist) in the verified source code if available.
Liquidity and pairs
- Search for a live trading pair on Base DEXs. Confirm that liquidity is real and not removable at will.
- Typical places to check: Uniswap on Base, Aerodrome, and analytics like Dexscreener or GeckoTerminal.
Safety checks
- Use tools that flag honeypots (can you buy but not sell?) and extreme taxes.
- Test a tiny transaction first, and read community reports in real time.
Community and provenance
- Find official channels (website, X/Twitter, Telegram, GitHub).
- Cross-check that the contract address they publish matches what you see on-chain.
Tools to track, analyze, and trade
For fast meme token discovery and safety checks:
- GMGN.AI: Smart money tracking, real-time analytics, and security checks for meme tokens across chains. Explore the SEEKER address page here: https://gmgn.ai/base/token/fV1R5sZ5_0x855e989aefa70fc0fce82eb5b119cf0ac6713f87
- Basescan: The official Base explorer for contract, holders, and transactions (Basescan.org).
- Dexscreener: Pair discovery and liquidity analytics on Base (Dexscreener).
- GeckoTerminal: DEX market data and charts (GeckoTerminal).
If and when SEEKER is verifiably listed, you can trade on Base DEXs such as Uniswap and Aerodrome while simultaneously tracking price action and security signals on GMGN.AI via the link above.
Note on automation: Some platforms offer automated trading and wallet mirroring. Always understand permissions and risks before connecting accounts or bots.
Practical checklist for practitioners
- Verify the exact contract on Basescan.
- Confirm token metadata, ownership status, and recent activity.
- Check whether liquidity is locked and whether trading pairs exist on reputable Base DEXs.
- Use multiple analytics sources (GMGN.AI, Dexscreener, GeckoTerminal) to cross-validate data.
- Be wary of similar names on other chains (especially Solana’s Seeker) and unrelated “Seeker” tools or games.
- Start small, expect volatility, and keep security-first habits.
Bottom line
As of November 20, 2025, we cannot confirm a live, verified SEEKER token contract at the provided Base address. That does not rule out future deployment or indexing, but it does mean a cautious approach is essential. Keep monitoring explorer data and trusted tools, verify any official announcements, and only interact once you can independently confirm the contract and trading pair details on-chain.