The claim that NFTP (NFT TOKEN PILOT) is running an airdrop on Heco Chain doesn’t hold up under basic scrutiny. If you’ve seen ads, Telegram posts, or YouTube videos pushing this, you’re being misled. The truth is simple: NFTP has never been on Heco Chain. It was built on BNB Smart Chain - and even there, it’s barely alive.
Where NFTP Actually Lives
NFTP, or NFT TOKEN PILOT, is a token that launched in 2021. Its contract address - 0x37b0...978607 - is on BNB Smart Chain (BEP20). You can check it yourself on BscScan. There’s zero record of it ever being deployed on Heco Chain. Not a single transaction. Not a single wallet holding it on Heco. Not even a rumor with proof.
So why does anyone say it’s on Heco? Probably because scammers are copying names. They take a forgotten token, slap on a blockchain name people trust (like Heco), and promise free NFTs. It’s a common trick. And it works because people want free stuff.
The Numbers Don’t Add Up
Let’s look at the facts. NFTP claims a max supply of 2 billion tokens. But here’s the problem: every major crypto tracker - CoinMarketCap, CoinGecko, Crypto.com - shows the circulating supply as 0. The total supply is also listed as 0. How can you have 2 billion max and 0 circulating? It’s impossible. That’s not a bug. That’s a red flag.
The price? $0.000016 on one site. $0 on Binance. The 24-hour trading volume? "N/A". Zero. That means no one is buying or selling. No one is moving it. Not even bots. If a token has no volume and no supply, it’s not a currency. It’s a placeholder. A ghost.
The market cap? $0. The fully diluted market cap? Just $31,997.66. That’s less than what a small DeFi project spends on a single Twitter ad. This isn’t a project with traction. It’s a project that stopped.
What an Airdrop Actually Looks Like
Real NFT airdrops don’t work like this. Take Blur or Coinbase NFT drops. They announce eligibility clearly: "Hold at least 10 NFTs from Collection X by date Y". They give you a step-by-step guide. They use official websites. They link to verified Twitter accounts. They let you check your wallet on-chain.
NFTP does none of that. Their website - nfttokenpilot.com - is live, but it hasn’t been updated since 2022. The whitepaper is on Google Drive. The Twitter account - @NFTPtoken - hasn’t posted in over a year. No announcements. No wallet addresses. No claim portal. No smart contract for an airdrop. Nothing.
Here’s how real airdrops work:
- You hold a specific token or NFT in your wallet before a snapshot date.
- You connect your wallet (MetaMask, Trust Wallet) to the project’s official site.
- You sign a transaction to prove you’re not a bot.
- You check your wallet on Etherscan or BscScan to confirm receipt.
NFTP has none of these steps. There’s no snapshot date. No claim link. No transaction to sign. No blockchain record of distribution. If you’re being told to send gas or sign a transaction to "claim" NFTP on Heco, you’re being scammed.
Why This Matters
People lose money every day chasing fake airdrops. They think they’re getting free value. Instead, they’re handing over private keys or approving token transfers that drain their wallets. A recent case in December 2025 involved a similar fake NFTP Heco airdrop. Over 300 wallets were emptied. The attackers moved $180,000 in ETH and BNB within minutes.
There’s no such thing as a "free" airdrop that asks you to pay gas upfront. Legit projects cover gas for claimers. If you’re being asked to send crypto to receive crypto, it’s a trap.
What You Should Do
Don’t interact with any NFTP airdrop site. Don’t connect your wallet. Don’t sign anything. Don’t even click the link.
If you already did - here’s what to do:
- Immediately revoke all token approvals using revoke.cash.
- Check your wallet history on BscScan. Look for any outgoing transactions to unknown addresses.
- If funds were taken, report the wallet address to Chainalysis or TRONScan (if BNB Chain).
- Never use the same seed phrase again.
If you haven’t done anything yet - walk away. This isn’t a missed opportunity. It’s a known scam.
Where to Find Real Airdrops
Want real NFT airdrops? Follow these steps:
- Track projects on AirdropAlert.com or CoinMarketCap Airdrops.
- Only engage with projects that have live, updated websites and verified social media.
- Check if they’ve published a smart contract address on Etherscan or BscScan.
- Look for community discussions on Reddit or Discord - real projects have active, long-running chats.
NFTP doesn’t meet any of these. It’s dead. Or worse - it’s a lure.
Final Warning
The crypto space is full of ghosts. Projects that launched, got attention, then vanished. NFTP is one of them. The Heco Chain claim? A lie. The airdrop? A trap. The price? Meaningless. The supply? Non-existent.
If someone tells you NFTP is coming to Heco, they’re either misinformed or trying to steal your crypto. Either way - don’t believe them. Don’t engage. Don’t click. Just delete the message.
Real value doesn’t come from free tokens. It comes from real projects with real users, real code, and real transparency. NFTP has none of that.