Raider Token: May 19, 2026

RAID $0.000345 USD price today, Raider Token chart, forecast.

How much RAID can I buy with 100 USD?

  • 0.000345 USD buys 1 RAID
  • 0.00172 USD buys 5 RAID
  • 0.00345 USD buys 10 RAID
  • 0.00864 USD buys 25 RAID
  • 0.0172 USD buys 50 RAID
  • 0.0345 USD buys 100 RAID
  • 0.172 USD buys 500 RAID
  • 0.345 USD buys 1,000 RAID
  • 1.00 USD buys 2,889.946 RAID
  • 3.458 USD buys 10,000 RAID
  • 5.00 USD buys 14,449.733 RAID
  • 10.00 USD buys 28,899.466 RAID
  • 17.291 USD buys 50,000 RAID
  • 25 USD buys 72,248.666 RAID
  • 50 USD buys 144,497.332 RAID
  • 100 USD buys 288,994.665 RAID
  • 500 USD buys 1,444,973.328 RAID
  • 1000 USD buys 2,889,946.656 RAID
  • 10000 USD buys 28,899,466.564 RAID
  • 50000 USD buys 144,497,332.824 RAID

That spike after July 2025 was when $BNB reached it’s ATH taking us with it. It looks like we are getting closer to that year long sideways crawl that we had between July 2024 and July 2025. I’m not sure if we are going to reach the lows of 0.0002655 that we had during that period. It would be nice, but our current price of 0.0003465 is decent too. $100 buys 288,994 Raider Tokens. Though 0.0002655 still nets about 90k more with 376647 Raider Tokens.

List of Crypto Wallets

Crypto Glossary

This website is powered by RAIDER TOKEN. For more information about the community-owned project, read the White Paper.

Cryptocurrency wallets are digital tools that allow users to store, manage, and interact with their crypto assets securely. Unlike traditional wallets that hold physical currency, crypto wallets store private keys—unique codes that grant access to the user’s funds on the blockchain. These wallets are essential for sending, receiving, and safeguarding cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, Ethereum, and others. They come with varying levels of security, accessibility, and functionality, depending on the user’s needs and technical expertise.

There are two main categories of cryptocurrency wallets: hot wallets and cold wallets.

Hot wallets are connected to the internet and include mobile apps, desktop software, and web-based platforms, offering convenience for frequent transactions but posing higher security risks.

Cold wallets, on the other hand, are offline storage solutions such as hardware wallets and paper wallets, ideal for long-term holding and enhanced protection against cyber threats.

Each type has its own trade-offs between ease of use and security, making it important for users to choose based on their investment strategy and risk tolerance.

Cold Wallets

Hardware wallets

  • Ballet: Hardware (non‑electronic); multi‑asset; user owns keys.
  • BC Vault: Hardware; multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • BitBox02 (BTC‑only / Multi): Hardware; BTC‑only or BTC/ETH/USDT/others; user owns keys.
  • Cobo Vault (discontinued, supports recovery): Hardware; multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • Coldcard Mk4 / Q: Hardware; Bitcoin‑only; user owns keys.
  • D’Cent Biometric: Hardware; multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • ELLIPAL Titan: Hardware (air‑gapped); multi‑chain incl. BTC/ETH/BSC; user owns keys.
  • GridPlus Lattice1: Hardware; ETH, ERC‑20, BTC via integrations; user owns keys.
  • imKey Pro: Hardware; multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • KeepKey: Hardware; BTC, ETH, ERC‑20, others; user owns keys.
  • Keystone Pro / Essential: Hardware; BTC, ETH, ERC‑20, etc.; user owns keys.
  • Ledger Nano S / X / Stax: Hardware; supports BTC, ETH, ERC‑20, plus many chains via Ledger Live/apps; user owns keys.
  • NGRAVE ZERO: Hardware; multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • OneKey Classic / Mini / Touch: Hardware; multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • SafePal S1 / X1: Hardware; multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • SecuX W20/W10/V20: Hardware; multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • Tangem: Hardware (card); multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • Trezor One / Model T: Hardware; BTC, ETH, ERC‑20, and more via Trezor Suite; user owns keys.

Hot Wallets

Custodial Software Wallets (desktop/mobile)

  • Aladdin Wallet — Software (mobile); multi‑chain; custodial — user does not own keys.
  • AMON — Software (mobile/web); multi‑chain; custodial — user does not own keys.
  • AVME — Software (desktop); AVME chain; custodial — user does not own keys.
  • BitCron — Software (mobile); multi‑chain; custodial — user does not own keys.
  • CoinRabbit Wallet — Custodial (web/mobile); multi‑chain; user does not own keys.
  • Crypterium Wallet — Software (mobile); multi‑chain; custodial — user does not own keys.
  • Cryptonator — Software (web/mobile); multi‑chain; custodial — user does not own keys.
  • NashCash — Custodial; multi‑chain; user does not own keys.
  • NashLink — Custodial; BTC/ETH; user does not own keys.
  • NashPay — Custodial; BTC/ETH; user does not own keys.
  • NashX — Custodial; multi‑chain; user does not own keys.
  • NashXchange Wallet — Custodial; multi‑chain; user does not own keys.
  • NashXchange — Custodial; multi‑chain; user does not own keys.
  • NashXPay Wallet — Custodial; multi‑chain; user does not own keys.
  • NashXPay — Custodial; multi‑chain; user does not own keys.

Non‑custodial Software Wallets (desktop/mobile)

  • ADAMANT Messenger — Software (mobile/desktop); multi‑chain messaging wallet; user owns keys.
  • Agama — Software (desktop); Komodo ecosystem + BTC/other UTXO coins; user owns keys.
  • Airgap — Software (mobile); Tezos/EVM/multi‑chain with offline vault; user owns keys.
  • AirGap: Mobile; Tezos/EVM/multi‑chain with AirGap Vault; user owns keys.
  • AlphaWallet: Mobile; Ethereum; user owns keys.
  • AmazeWallet — Software (mobile); multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • Ambire: Web/mobile; EVM smart‑contract wallet; user owns keys.
  • Anchorage Digital — Custody platform; institutional multi‑chain; user owns keys (institutional control).
  • Argent: Mobile; Ethereum/L2s (ZKSync/Starknet); user owns smart‑contract wallet.
  • Armory — Software (desktop); Bitcoin‑only; user owns keys.
  • atato Custody — Custody; institutional multi‑chain; user owns keys (institutional).
  • Atomex — Software (desktop/mobile); BTC, LTC, ETH, XMR, swaps; user owns keys.
  • Atomic Wallet: Desktop/mobile; multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • Bitcoin Well — Software (web/mobile); BTC; user owns keys.
  • Bitcoin.com Wallet — Software (mobile/web); BTC, BCH; user owns keys.
  • Bitfia — Software (mobile); multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • Bitget Wallet — Software (mobile/extension); multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • BitPay Wallet: Mobile/desktop; BTC/BCH/ETH/ERC‑20; user owns keys.
  • Blockstream Green: iOS/Android/Desktop; Bitcoin (and Liquid); user owns keys (2FA multisig).
  • BlueWallet: iOS/Android; Bitcoin/Lightning (custodial LN option); on‑chain keys owned by user.
  • BRD (migrated to Coinbase Wallet): Mobile; BTC/ETH; user owned keys (project sunset).
  • Breez: Android/iOS; Lightning‑first Bitcoin; user owns keys.
  • BRISE Wallet: Mobile; Bitgert/EVM; user owns keys.
  • BTC‑Wall Wallet — Software (mobile); BTC; user owns keys.
  • Cake Wallet — Software (mobile); XMR, BTC, LTC; user owns keys.
  • Cake Wallet: Mobile; Monero‑first plus BTC/LTC; user owns keys.
  • Coin Wallet — Software (mobile/web/desktop); multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • Coin98: Mobile/extension; multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • Coinomi: Desktop/mobile; multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • CoinRemitter — Software (web); BTC, ETH, LTC, BCH, DOGE; user owns keys.
  • CoolWallet S / Pro — Hardware; multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • Copay (legacy): Mobile/desktop; BTC; user owns keys (legacy).
  • Cure Wallet — Software (mobile); multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • Dash Wallet (HashEngineering): Mobile; Dash; user owns keys.
  • Decrediton: Desktop; Decred; user owns keys.
  • Defiant — Software (mobile); BTC, ETH, ERC‑20, stablecoins; user owns keys.
  • Edge Wallet — Software (mobile); multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • Edge Wallet: Mobile; multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • Edge: Android/iOS; BTC, ETH, ERC‑20, XRP, XLM, etc.; user owns keys.
  • Eidoo — Software (mobile/desktop); ETH, ERC‑20, BTC; user owns keys.
  • Electrum: Desktop/mobile; Bitcoin‑only; user owns keys.
  • Enjin Wallet — Software (mobile); ETH, ERC‑20, ERC‑721; user owns keys.
  • Evercoin — Hardware/software hybrid; multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • Exodus: Desktop/mobile; multi‑chain incl. BTC/ETH/ERC‑20/SOL/ADA/ATOM; user owns keys.
  • Feather Wallet: Desktop; Monero; user owns keys.
  • Firo (Electron/Firo Mobile): Desktop/mobile; Firo; user owns keys.
  • Freewallet (varies by product): Mobile/web; multi‑asset; some products custodial, others non‑custodial — check variant.
  • Freewallet — Software (mobile/web); multi‑chain; mostly custodial — check variant.
  • Gem Wallet — Software (mobile); multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • GridPlus Lattice1 — Hardware; ETH, ERC‑20, BTC; user owns keys.
  • Guarda Wallet — Software (mobile/desktop/web); multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • Guarda: Desktop/mobile/web; multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • Hiro Wallet — Software (desktop/web); Stacks blockchain; user owns keys.
  • Huobi Wallet — Software (mobile); multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • imToken: Mobile; Ethereum/EVM/BTC; user owns keys.
  • Infinito Wallet — Software (mobile); multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • Infinito Wallet: Mobile; multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • Jaxx Liberty (legacy): Desktop/mobile; multi‑chain; user owns keys (project de‑emphasized).
  • Jaxx Liberty — Software (mobile/desktop); multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • JuBiter Blade — Hardware; BTC, ETH, ERC‑20; user owns keys.
  • Klever Wallet — Software (mobile); multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • Komodo Wallet (AtomicDEX): Desktop/mobile; multi‑chain DEX; user owns keys.
  • Kraken non‑custodial (in development/region‑limited): Varies; verify before use.
  • Ledger Live (app) — Software (desktop/mobile); manages Ledger hardware; user owns keys via device.
  • Litewallet — Software (mobile); Litecoin; user owns keys.
  • Loopring Wallet: Mobile; Ethereum/L2 (Loopring); user owns keys.
  • MathWallet — Software (mobile/desktop/extension); multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • MathWallet: Mobile/desktop/extension; multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • MetaMask — Software (extension/mobile); EVM chains; user owns keys.
  • Monerujo — Software (mobile); Monero; user owns keys.
  • Monerujo: Android; Monero; user owns keys.
  • Muun: iOS/Android; Bitcoin/Lightning (non‑custodial UX); user owns keys.
  • MyAlgo — Software (web); Algorand; user owns keys.
  • Mycelium: Android/iOS; Bitcoin‑first; user owns keys.
  • MyEtherWallet (MEW) — Software (web/mobile); Ethereum; user owns keys.
  • MyMonero — Software (web/mobile/desktop); Monero; user owns keys.
  • Nash — Software (web/mobile); multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • NashWallet — Software (mobile); multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • NashXWallet — Software (mobile); multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • ONTO: Mobile; multi‑chain (Ontology/EVM); user owns keys.
  • OWNR Wallet: Mobile/desktop; multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • Phoenix (ACINQ): Android/iOS; Lightning‑first Bitcoin; user owns keys.
  • Pillar: Mobile; EVM chains; user owns keys.
  • Rainbow: Mobile; Ethereum/L2s; user owns keys.
  • Safe (formerly Gnosis Safe): Web/mobile; smart‑contract multisig (EVM/L2s); org/users control.
  • Samourai: Android; Bitcoin‑only with Whirlpool; user owns keys.
  • Sparrow Wallet: Desktop; Bitcoin‑only; user owns keys.
  • TokenPocket: Mobile/desktop; multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • Trust Wallet: Android/iOS; multi‑chain incl. EVM, BTC, SOL; user owns keys.
  • Trustee Wallet: Mobile; multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • Unstoppable Wallet: Mobile; multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • ViaWallet: Mobile; multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • Wasabi Wallet: Desktop; Bitcoin‑only with CoinJoin; user owns keys.
  • Zecwallet Lite / YWallet: Desktop/mobile; Zcash; user owns keys.
  • Zengo: Mobile; multi‑chain with MPC; user controls access (no seed phrase).
  • Zerion Wallet: Mobile/extension; EVM/L2s; user owns keys.
  • Zeus: Android/iOS; Bitcoin/Lightning node companion; user owns keys.

Browser extension wallets (EVM and multi‑chain)

  • Backpack: Solana (xNFTs/multi‑chain plans); user owns keys.
  • Binance Web3 Wallet (in Binance app/extension): Multi‑chain; non‑custodial mode available; user owns keys in that mode.
  • Bitget Wallet: Multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • Coinbase Wallet (extension): EVM/L2s; user owns keys.
  • Core (Avalanche): Avalanche + EVM; user owns keys.
  • Cosmostation Extension: Cosmos chains; user owns keys.
  • Eternl (ccvault): Cardano; user owns keys.
  • Flint: Cardano/EVM sidechains; user owns keys.
  • Frame: Desktop wallet/extension for Ethereum; user owns keys.
  • Keplr Extension: Cosmos chains; user owns keys.
  • Kukai (web/extension): Tezos; user owns keys.
  • Lace: Cardano; user owns keys.
  • Leap Cosmos Extension: Cosmos chains; user owns keys.
  • Martian (Aptos): Aptos; user owns keys.
  • MathWallet Extension: Multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • MetaMask: EVM chains and L2s; user owns keys.
  • Nami: Cardano; user owns keys.
  • OKX Wallet: Multi‑chain (EVM/SOL/others); user owns keys.
  • Opera Crypto Browser (built‑in): EVM/others; user owns keys locally.
  • Petra (Aptos): Aptos; user owns keys.
  • Phantom (extension): Solana (plus EVM beta); user owns keys.
  • Polkadot.js Extension: Polkadot/Substrate; user owns keys.
  • Rabby: EVM‑focused with transaction simulation; user owns keys.
  • Rise (Sui Wallet): Sui; user owns keys.
  • Sender (NEAR): NEAR; user owns keys.
  • Solflare (extension): Solana; user owns keys.
  • SubWallet: Polkadot/Substrate; user owns keys.
  • Suiet: Sui; user owns keys.
  • Talisman: Polkadot/Substrate; user owns keys.
  • Tally Ho (Fork of MetaMask, rebranded to Consensys Mesh project status varies): EVM; user owns keys.
  • Temple Wallet: Tezos; user owns keys.
  • TokenPocket Extension: Multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • TronLink: TRON; user owns keys.
  • XDEFI Wallet: Multi‑chain incl. THORChain; user owns keys.
  • Yoroi: Cardano (light wallet); user owns keys.

Chain‑specific and ecosystem wallets

  • Anchor (NEAR): NEAR; user owns keys.
  • Core (Avalanche): Avalanche; user owns keys.
  • Cosmostation: Cosmos; user owns keys.
  • Daedalus (full node): Cardano; user owns keys.
  • GeroWallet: Cardano; user owns keys.
  • Glif: Filecoin; user owns keys.
  • Glow: Solana; user owns keys.
  • Here Wallet: NEAR; user owns keys.
  • Keplr: Cosmos; user owns keys.
  • Leap: Cosmos; user owns keys.
  • Liquality: Bitcoin/EVM/NEAR swaps; user owns keys.
  • Martian: Aptos; user owns keys.
  • MyAlgo (security incident — caution): Algorand; user owns keys.
  • NEAR Wallet (now web2 login w/ key mgmt; use Sender/Here for keys): NEAR; non‑custodial depends on setup.
  • Nova Wallet: Polkadot/Kusama; user owns keys.
  • Pera Wallet — Software (mobile); Algorand; user owns keys.
  • Pera Wallet: Algorand; user owns keys.
  • Petra: Aptos; user owns keys.
  • Phantom: Solana; user owns keys.
  • Polkadot.js / Talisman / SubWallet: Polkadot/Substrate; user owns keys.
  • Pontem Wallet — Software (extension); Aptos; user owns keys.
  • Pontem: Aptos; user owns keys.
  • Rabbi‑Bitcoin (Sparrow/Electrum class): Bitcoin; user owns keys.
  • Rise Wallet — Software (extension); Sui; user owns keys.
  • Sender Wallet — Software (extension/mobile); NEAR; user owns keys.
  • Slope (security incident history — caution): Solana; user owns keys.
  • Solflare: Solana; user owns keys.
  • Sollet — Software (web/extension); Solana; user owns keys.
  • Spatium Wallet — Software (mobile); multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • Stargazer Desktop — Software (desktop); Constellation DAG; user owns keys.
  • Stargazer Extension — Software (extension); Constellation DAG; user owns keys.
  • Stargazer Mobile — Software (mobile); Constellation DAG; user owns keys.
  • Stargazer Wallet — Software (extension); Constellation DAG; user owns keys.
  • Stargazer Web — Software (web); Constellation DAG; user owns keys.
  • Starname Wallet — Software (web); Starname blockchain; user owns keys.
  • Station (Terra reboot): Terra; user owns keys.
  • Sui Wallet (Ethos/Rise/Suiet family): Sui; user owns keys.
  • Temple / Kukai / AirGap: Tezos; user owns keys.
  • Terra Station: Terra; user owns keys.
  • TON Keeper: TON; user owns keys.
  • Tonhub: TON; user owns keys.
  • TronLink: TRON; user owns keys.
  • Yoroi / Lace / Eternl / Flint / Typhon: Cardano; user owns keys.

Lightning‑focused and Bitcoin wallets

  • Aqua (Synonym): Bitcoin/USDT on Liquid; user owns keys.
  • Bitkit (Synonym): Bitcoin/Lightning; user owns keys.
  • Breez: Non‑custodial Lightning; user owns keys.
  • Cash App: Bitcoin; custodial; user does not own keys.
  • Green (Blockstream): Bitcoin; user owns keys.
  • Muun: Non‑custodial on‑chain + Lightning UX; user owns keys.
  • Phoenix: Non‑custodial Lightning; user owns keys.
  • River: Bitcoin; custodial; user does not own keys.
  • Specter Desktop: Bitcoin multisig coordinator; user owns keys.
  • Strike: Bitcoin payments; custodial; user does not own keys.
  • Wallet of Satoshi: Lightning custodial; Bitcoin/Lightning; user does not own keys.
  • Zap (legacy): Lightning; user owns keys.
  • Zephyr / Peach / Phoenix class: Bitcoin; user owns keys.
  • Zeus: Non‑custodial Lightning/node; user owns keys.

Custodial and exchange‑linked wallets

  • Abra: Custodial; multi‑chain; user does not own keys.
  • Binance (exchange account): Custodial; many assets; user does not own keys.
  • Binance Web3 Wallet (in‑app): Non‑custodial mode; user owns keys in that mode.
  • Bitfinex: Custodial; user does not own keys.
  • Bitget: Custodial exchange plus non‑custodial wallet; keys depend on product.
  • Bitpanda Wallet: Custodial; multi‑chain; user does not own keys.
  • Bitstamp: Custodial; user does not own keys.
  • Bitwala/Nuri (defunct): Custodial/non‑custodial hybrid; project closed.
  • Blockchain.com Custodial Wallet: Custodial; multi‑chain; user does not own keys.
  • Blockchain.com Wallet: Non‑custodial + custodial hybrid; keys depend on setup.
  • Bybit: Custodial; user does not own keys.
  • CEX.IO Wallet: Custodial; multi‑chain; user does not own keys.
  • Changelly Wallet: Custodial; multi‑chain; user does not own keys.
  • Coinbase (exchange account): Custodial; many assets supported; user does not own keys.
  • Coinbase Wallet (separate app): Non‑custodial EVM/multi‑chain; user owns keys.
  • Coincheck Wallet: Custodial; multi‑chain; user does not own keys.
  • CoinCorner: Custodial; user does not own keys.
  • Coinfloor Wallet: Custodial; BTC; user does not own keys.
  • CoinJar Wallet: Custodial; multi‑chain; user does not own keys.
  • CoinList Wallet: Custodial; multi‑chain; user does not own keys.
  • CoinSpot Wallet: Custodial; multi‑chain; user does not own keys.
  • Crypto.com App/DeFi Wallet: Exchange app custodial; DeFi Wallet non‑custodial; keys depend on product.
  • CryptoPay Wallet: Custodial; BTC, LTC, XRP; user does not own keys.
  • eToro Wallet: Custodial; multi‑chain; user does not own keys.
  • Gate.io Wallet: Custodial; multi‑chain; user does not own keys.
  • Gemini: Custodial and custody; user does not own keys.
  • HitBTC Wallet: Custodial; multi‑chain; user does not own keys.
  • Hotbit Wallet: Custodial; multi‑chain; user does not own keys.
  • Huobi (HTX): Custodial; user does not own keys.
  • Indodax Wallet: Custodial; multi‑chain; user does not own keys.
  • Kraken: Custodial; many assets; user does not own keys.
  • Kriptomat Wallet: Custodial; multi‑chain; user does not own keys.
  • KuCoin: Custodial; user does not own keys.
  • LBank Wallet: Custodial (exchange‑based); supports 967+ cryptocurrencies including BTC, ETH, BCH, LTC, XRP, SOL, DOGE, USDC, DAI, and many others; user does not own private keys – keys are held by LBank.
  • Liquid Wallet: Custodial; BTC, BCH, ETH, USDT, and other major coins; user does not own keys.
  • LiteBit Wallet: Custodial; BTC, ETH, LTC, XRP, and other supported coins; user does not own keys.
  • Luno: Custodial wallet/exchange; user does not own keys.
  • MEXC Wallet: Custodial; multi‑chain (BTC, ETH, USDT, etc.); user does not own keys.
  • Nexo: Custodial; user does not own keys.
  • OKX Wallet (exchange): Custodial; BTC, ETH, USDT, and hundreds more; user does not own keys.
  • OKX: Custodial exchange plus non‑custodial wallet; keys depend on product.
  • PayPal (crypto): Custodial; user does not own keys.
  • Phemex Wallet: Custodial; BTC, ETH, USDT, and other major coins; user does not own keys.
  • ProBit Wallet: Custodial; multi‑chain; user does not own keys.
  • Revolut (crypto): Custodial with limited self‑custody features regionally; user generally does not own keys.
  • Strike: Custodial; user does not own keys.
  • Swan: Custodial; user does not own keys (supports withdrawals).
  • Upbit Wallet: Custodial; BTC, ETH, XRP, ADA, and others; user does not own keys.
  • WhiteBIT Wallet: Custodial; BTC, ETH, USDT, and other major coins; user does not own keys.
  • Wirex: Custodial card/wallet; user does not own keys.
  • XT.com Wallet: Custodial; multi‑chain; user does not own keys.
  • YouHodler: Custodial; user does not own keys.
  • ZB.com Wallet: Custodial; BTC, ETH, USDT, and other supported coins; user does not own keys.

By using RaiderToken.com, you agree to our full disclaimer, which includes important information on financial advice, risks, and regulatory considerations.

Price of Raider Token: $0.0006334

Crypto Glossary

This website is powered by RAIDER TOKEN. For more information about the community-owned project, read the White Paper.

Price of Raider Token: October 12, 2025

  • Price of Raider Token $0.0006334
  • Contract: 0x68f483b06f1e96b10239e333b598f145da8571c2
Raider Token is a community-owned cryptocurrency operating on the BNB Chain, designed to offer stability and resilience in a volatile market. Despite recent downturns in the broader crypto space, including a sharp drop in Binance Coin (BNB), Raider Token demonstrated notable strength. Its liquidity pool remained stable, with over 63 BNB and 123 million Raider Tokens still locked, indicating strong holder confidence. The token’s value is closely tied to BNB due to its liquidity pairing and continues to follow BNB’s chart movements.

Meme Coins on BNB Chain

Hype, Risks, and Market Manipulation

Meme coins are cryptocurrencies inspired by internet jokes, viral content, or pop culture. Unlike traditional tokens with clear utility or governance roles, meme coins often rely on community hype and social media buzz. Their value is driven more by sentiment than by real-world application.

On the BNB Chain, meme coins have exploded in popularity. Traders flock to these tokens hoping for quick profits. Many meme coins are launched with humorous names, cartoon logos, and exaggerated promises. While some gain traction, most fade quickly or collapse entirely.

How Meme Coins Work

Meme coins typically launch on decentralized exchanges like PancakeSwap. Developers create a token, set initial liquidity, and promote it through social media. Early buyers hope to ride the wave of hype and sell at a profit. These coins often use bonding curve models or fair-launch mechanisms to attract attention.

The BNB Chain’s low fees and fast transactions make it ideal for meme coin activity. Traders can buy and sell quickly, and developers can launch tokens with minimal cost. However, this ease of access also invites abuse and manipulation.

Binance’s Role in the Meme Coin Market

Binance, the company behind the BNB Chain, holds significant influence over the meme coin ecosystem. While Binance does not directly endorse most meme coins, its actions and platforms shape market behavior. The recent launch of “Meme Rush,” a Binance-backed initiative, triggered major shifts in the market.

Meme Rush introduced a launchpad for meme coins with KYC requirements and capped valuations. This move aimed to reduce fake volumes and promote fair launches. However, it caused panic among existing meme coin holders. Traders sold off older tokens to prepare for new launches, leading to steep price drops.

Binance’s founder, Changpeng Zhao (CZ), also influences sentiment. His tweets, even when casual, have sparked buying frenzies or sell-offs. When CZ clarified that his posts were not endorsements, many meme coins crashed by over 80%. This shows how centralized influence can destabilize decentralized markets.

Risks of Investing in Meme Coins

Meme coins carry high risks. Their prices are volatile, and most lack long-term viability. Many tokens have low liquidity, meaning large trades can crash the price. Wallet concentration is another issue—some coins have over 70% of supply held by fewer than 50 addresses.

Here are key risks to consider:

  • Low Liquidity – Difficult to exit positions without major price impact
  • Wallet Concentration – Few holders control most of the supply
  • Fake Volume – Artificial trading activity to attract buyers
  • No Real Utility – Most meme coins serve no functional purpose
  • Hype-Driven Volatility – Prices swing wildly based on social media trends
  • Rug Pulls – Developers abandon projects after cashing out
  • Pump and Dump Schemes – Coordinated efforts to inflate and crash prices
  • Lack of Regulation – No oversight or investor protection
  • Short Lifespan – Many coins disappear within weeks
  • Misleading Marketing – False claims to lure investors
  • Developer Anonymity – Hard to hold creators accountable
  • Centralized Influence – Binance actions can shift entire markets

These risks make meme coins unsuitable for long-term investment. Traders should approach them with caution and avoid investing more than they can afford to lose.

How Developers Manipulate the Market

Some developers use deceptive tactics to profit unfairly from meme coins. They may create multiple wallets to simulate demand, inflate trading volume, or control large portions of supply. These actions mislead buyers and create false confidence.

In recent cases, single wallets held over 30% of a token’s supply. Developers executed large transactions to pump prices, then dumped their holdings for profit. This left retail investors with worthless tokens. Others launched coins with misleading names or logos to mimic Binance affiliation, further confusing buyers.

Manipulation also occurs through social media. Developers pay influencers to promote tokens or spread rumors. These tactics create artificial hype and attract unsuspecting traders. Once prices peak, insiders sell off, triggering a crash.

Conclusion: Hype vs. Reality

Meme coins on the BNB Chain offer excitement, humor, and potential profit. But beneath the surface lies a volatile and often manipulated market. Binance’s influence, developer tactics, and lack of regulation create a risky environment for traders.

As new meme coins continue to launch, one question remains: Will the next viral token be a community success—or another rug pull waiting to happen?


By using RaiderToken.com, you agree to our full disclaimer, which includes important information on financial advice, risks, and regulatory considerations.

Price of Raider Token: $0.0005853

Crypto Glossary

This website is powered by RAIDER TOKEN. For more information about the community-owned project, read the White Paper.

Price of Raider Token: October 11, 2025

  • Price of Raider Token $0.0005853
  • Contract: 0x68f483b06f1e96b10239e333b598f145da8571c2

Raider Token Holds Steady Amid BNB’s Steep Decline

BNB’s Sharp Drop Sends Shockwaves Through the Market

On October 11, 2025, the cryptocurrency world witnessed a dramatic downturn. Binance Coin (BNB), one of the most prominent assets in the market, plunged by over 20% in a single day. This steep decline rattled investors and triggered widespread sell-offs across multiple blockchain ecosystems.

Raider Token, which operates on the BNB Chain, was not immune to the turbulence. Its price dipped in response to the broader market panic. Raider Token’s value is closely tied to BNB’s performance. When BNB climbs, Raider Token rises with it. When BNB falls, Raider Token follows. This correlation is due to the Raider Token / BNB Liquidity Pair that largely determines the pricing of the token.

However, unlike many other tokens that experienced aggressive sell-offs, Raider Token did not. Investors were not rattled. Raider Token began to recover as BNB rebounded. This rebound suggests that the token may be more resilient than its price initially indicated, and that its community remains confident in its long-term potential.

Raider Token’s Strength Lies Beneath the Surface

While the price of Raider Token fell during the crash, its underlying metrics tell a different story. The total pooled assets remain stable, with 63.83 BNB and 123.35 million Raider Tokens still locked in liquidity. This consistency reveals that investors did not rush to exit their positions.

Such stability is a positive sign during a market-wide crash. It suggests that Raider Token holders maintain strong conviction in the project. Rather than reacting emotionally, they chose to stay the course. This behavior reflects confidence in the token’s long-term potential and the strength of its community.

Why Price Alone Doesn’t Tell the Whole Story

In volatile markets, price movements often dominate headlines. However, they don’t always reflect the true health of a project. Raider Token’s liquidity pool remained untouched, signaling that its foundation is intact. This is a key indicator that the token’s ecosystem is still functioning as intended.

Investor behavior during downturns can reveal more than charts. When holders refuse to sell despite falling prices, it shows belief in the token’s future. Raider Token’s community demonstrated this today. Their decision to hold rather than flee speaks volumes about the project’s perceived value.


By using RaiderToken.com, you agree to our full disclaimer, which includes important information on financial advice, risks, and regulatory considerations.

Price of Raider Token: $0.0006810

Crypto Glossary

This website is powered by RAIDER TOKEN. For more information about the community-owned project, read the White Paper.

Price of Raider Token: October 08, 2025

  • Price of Raider Token $0.0006810
  • Contract: 0x68f483b06f1e96b10239e333b598f145da8571c2

🚀 Arbitrage Mining: The Engine Behind Raider Token’s Sustainable Reflections

In the ever-evolving world of cryptocurrency, innovation is key to separating legitimate projects from fleeting hype. One of the most misunderstood yet powerful mechanisms in decentralized finance is arbitrage mining—and Raider Token is harnessing it in a way that redefines how holders earn passive income.

💡 What Is Arbitrage Mining?

Arbitrage mining is a process where automated bots—typically third-party and independent—scan multiple exchanges for price discrepancies of the same asset. When they find a difference, they buy low on one exchange and sell high on another, profiting from the spread. This behavior is not new in finance, but in the context of crypto, it becomes a powerful tool for generating organic value.

Unlike traditional mining, which relies on solving complex mathematical problems, arbitrage mining taps into market inefficiencies. It’s fast, efficient, and doesn’t require massive energy consumption.

🛡️ Raider Token’s Unique Twist: Reflections Without Transactions

Most reflection-based tokens reward holders by redistributing a portion of transaction fees. This model, while popular, has a critical flaw: it depends on constant trading activity. If people stop buying or selling, the reflections dry up.

Raider Token flips this model on its head.

  • Reflections are generated organically through arbitrage bots—not from other holders’ transactions.
  • These bots interact with Raider Token’s liquidity pools, creating arbitrage opportunities that trigger smart contract mechanisms.
  • The result? A steady stream of reflections for holders, even when trading volume is low.

This means Raider Token holders enjoy passive income that’s independent of hype cycles or new user onboarding.

🧱 Not a Pyramid Scheme—Here’s Why

Crypto skeptics often label token projects as pyramid schemes, arguing that they rely on new investors to pay existing ones. While this may be true for some poorly designed tokens, Raider Token’s arbitrage mining model is fundamentally different.

  • No new holders are needed to generate reflections.
  • Third-party arbitrage bots, not users, fuel the reward system.
  • Sustainability is built into the protocol, not dependent on marketing or recruitment.

This structure ensures that Raider Token operates more like a self-sustaining ecosystem than a speculative house of cards.

🌱 A Glimpse Into the Future of DeFi

Raider Token’s arbitrage mining model is more than just a clever mechanism—it’s a statement. It shows that crypto can evolve beyond transactional gimmicks and into systems that reward long-term holders through real market dynamics.

As the DeFi space matures, expect more projects to follow Raider Token’s lead: building utility, sustainability, and transparency into their core.

Vocabulary List

  • Arbitrage – Buying an asset in one market and selling it in another to profit from price differences.
  • Arbitrage Mining – A crypto mechanism where bots exploit price discrepancies across exchanges to generate value.
  • Reflections – Passive rewards distributed to token holders, often in the form of additional tokens.
  • Liquidity Pool – A pool of funds locked in a smart contract that facilitates trading on decentralized exchanges.
  • Smart Contract – Self-executing code that automates transactions based on predefined conditions.
  • Third-party Arbitrage Bots – Independent automated programs that scan exchanges and execute profitable trades.
  • Organic Generation – Value or rewards created through natural market behavior, not artificial incentives.
  • Pyramid Scheme – A fraudulent model that relies on recruiting new participants to pay earlier investors.
  • Decentralized Finance (DeFi) – A blockchain-based financial system that operates without traditional intermediaries.
  • Passive Income – Earnings received without active involvement, such as through investments or automated systems.
  • Tokenomics – The economic structure and incentive model behind a cryptocurrency or token project.
  • Holders – Individuals or entities who own and retain a cryptocurrency token.
  • Trading Volume – The total amount of a cryptocurrency traded within a specific time period.
  • Ecosystem – The network of technologies, users, and mechanisms that support a crypto project.

By using RaiderToken.com, you agree to our full disclaimer, which includes important information on financial advice, risks, and regulatory considerations.

Raider Token ($Raid)

Buy Raider Token

Buy Raider Token on Pancake Swap.

Pankcake Swap

Raider Token is a community-owned project.

The RT community is unique. Our goal is to build a safe cryptocurrency that will protect new investors. To do this, RT is a completely renounced project. There is no other project on the Binance Smart Chain that has shutdown outside manipulation and abuse in the way Raider Token has. Like Bitcoin and DogeCoin, RT is totally renounced and disowned.

When there are no leaders, everyone is a potential leader. Anybody can be a leader in the RT project just by leading and building. If you want to take control of your destiny, buy some RaiderToken ($RAID) and then promote it in the manner you prefer.

Since RaiderToken has no leaders, there is no authority. Nobody can tell you what to do or what not to do. You are in control. If you don’t want to be in control, that’s okay too. You can join our socials and follow what the rest of the RT community is doing.

Raider Token on Social Media

What is RaiderToken ($RAID)?

Raider Token ($RAID) is a cryptocurrency that has one single utility. It’s a safe currency that can never be rug-pulled. It is impossible for any single person, group of people, organization, or entity of any kind to manipulate the Raider Token contract at any time or for any purpose.

Why is Raider Token RUGpull-proof?

There are three basic reasons why RT ($RAID) is Rugpull-proof.

  1. The contract is permanently renounced. There is no mechanism for any person to acquire control of the contract and to unrenounce it. Therefore, Raider Token cannot be modified or manipulated. The RT ($RAID) contract is the way it is. Forever. Immutable.
  2. The LP has been locked until the next century. No person now living will be alive when the $RAID Liquidity Pool unlocks. At no time during our lifespan will a developer team have access to the money in the LP. Cryptocurrency might not even exist in 2100. The Earth might not even exist at that time. We can’t say what will happen at that time. All we can say is that none of the creators of $RAID will be here to see it.
  3. There are no Raider Token developer wallets. Raider Token was created to be developer free. 100% of the 1% reflections are distributed amongst the holders. RT ($RAID) can’t be scammed because there is nothing scammers can access.

RT ($RAID) is one of the absolute safest cryptocurrencies on the Binance Smart Chain.

RT ($RAID) might even be the safest cryptocurrency token on any blockchain.