Memorials over markets
Crypto Graveyard is built around stories, public memorial pages, eulogies, leaderboards, and community rituals—not investment promises.
A proper funeral for dead coins, without pretending the casket is a tax strategy.
Crypto Graveyard is an entertainment, memorial, and analytics project for forgotten, abandoned, rugged, and dust-bin crypto assets. The goal is to turn painful bags into shareable stories: public memorials, eulogies, confidence labels, and eventually collectible headstones.
Crypto Graveyard is built around stories, public memorial pages, eulogies, leaderboards, and community rituals—not investment promises.
Future burials should distinguish on-chain facts, estimated values, documented records, and unknown claims so visitors can tell what is actually proven.
The site can describe observed wallet activity and memorial metrics, but it should never claim to verify deductible tax losses.
These are the bright lines for keeping the project useful, weird, and not accidentally shaped like a scam goblin.
Crypto Graveyard will never ask for seed phrases, private keys, wallet recovery words, or remote access to your device.
Official receiving wallets are not published in this prototype. Any current request to send tokens should be treated as suspicious.
Burials should be framed as memorial transfers, not guaranteed tax events, charitable donations, investment sales, or exchange services.
Public entries should use masked wallet addresses and pseudonyms unless a participant explicitly chooses to reveal more.
Large-value claims need confidence labels and supporting evidence before being presented as documented.
This wording matters. It helps keep the brand playful while avoiding promises the site should not make.
Next decision
The next product question is whether Crypto Graveyard publishes a few permanent chain-specific cemetery wallets, creates per-submission deposit addresses, or starts with a manual review flow.