Pump.fun GO Bounty Platform Sparks Backlash Over Extreme Crypto Payouts

  • Pump.fun GO lets anyone pay crypto bounties for almost any real-world task.
  • The top bounty offered $24,584 to film a murder victim's family.
  • Critics warn the payouts could fuel harassment, dangerous stunts, and legal risk.
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Pump.fun GO went live on June 4, a bounty marketplace that lets anyone pay crypto rewards for nearly any task. Within hours, listings ranged from forehead tattoos to filming a murder victim’s family.

The Solana meme coin platform holds rewards in escrow until moderators approve a submission. That open model has drawn sharp criticism over safety, harassment, and the kinds of stunts users are willing to fund.

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How Pump.fun GO Works

Pump.fun pitched GO as a way to pay anyone to do anything for unlimited rewards. Creators set a reward, define the task, and lock funds until the bounty expires or a winner is chosen.

Bounty creators cannot withdraw rewards once a listing goes live. Pump.fun moderates submissions and decides which ones qualify, while creators can only recommend winners.

Unclaimed funds become reclaimable after a dispute window.

The launch followed Pump.fun’s shift toward utility tokens and a $350 million buyback campaign that has run since July 2025 without lifting the price.

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Pump.fun (PUMP) Price Performance. Source: BeInCrypto

The PUMP token set a record low near $0.00135 on June 5, down about 20% on the day and roughly 84% below its September 2025 peak.

Extreme Bounties Draw Criticism

Some of the highest listings offered roughly $57,000 to skydive into a 2026 World Cup match in a meme coin mascot costume and $2,762 for a forehead tattoo. The figures fed wider scrutiny of PUMP’s valuation.

“Humans & money are undeniably the most powerful tools on Earth. We’re combining both of them with GO: an all encompassing bounty platform where ANYONE can create or complete bounties for ANY task for UNLIMITED rewards,” Pump.fun added.

The top active bounty offered $24,584 to interview the family of a killer in the Henry Nowak case or the police officer involved. Trader Jeremy flagged the listing within an hour of launch.

The warning carries weight. Pump.fun suspended its livestreaming feature in November 2024 after users broadcast threats of violence and self-harm to inflate token prices. Similar abuse returned once the feature came back.

Pump.fun later leaned into the attention, posting a screenshot of a direct message to Michael Saylor asking for paid tasks. The stunt echoed the platform’s earlier token launch controversy.

One contract even baited suicide for a fee, attracting a payout as high as $690,000 or approximately 10,000 SOL tokens.

The roughly $57,000 skydiving bounty reportedly vanished after scrutiny. Whether Pump.fun can police a pay-anyone marketplace may decide how long GO survives in its current form.

“Offering a bounty on the first bill introduced to ban this dystopian nightmare,” said the 57th Governor of New York State, Kathy Hochul. 


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