James Wynn Says X Account Was Hacked After $WORLD Memecoin Rug Pull


Crypto trader James Wynn has denied involvement in a short-lived $WORLD memecoin rug pull after his X account was allegedly hacked and used to promote the token.

The $WORLD incident unfolded on Solana through pump.fun, where the attacker allegedly created the token, pushed suspicious promotional posts from Wynn’s account and used fake buy activity to make the launch appear active. The token briefly reached a market capitalization of about $35,000 before liquidity vanished and the attacker exited with roughly 3.2 SOL in profit.

Wynn quickly replied that his account had been hacked, rejecting any connection to the posts. The promotional material included a stylized Matrix-like image of Wynn, which helped the token draw attention before the rug pull became obvious. The episode was small in dollar terms, but it spread quickly because Wynn remains one of crypto’s most recognizable high-risk traders.

The mechanics were familiar: a recognizable account creates credibility, a low-cap memecoin launches with artificial activity, buyers rush in before checking the setup, and the token collapses once the deployer or early holder sells into the new liquidity. The profit was minor compared with major DeFi exploits, but the user-risk pattern was the same.

Solana Memecoin Traders Face Another Account-Hack Trap

The $WORLD case shows why hacked social accounts remain useful for memecoin attackers. A compromised profile with a large audience can produce the first wave of buyers faster than a normal token launch. On pump.fun, where new tokens can be created in minutes, that attention can be enough to create a quick price spike before the scam exits.

The incident also lands around a trader whose public history already attracts extreme market attention. Wynn’s high-leverage moves have repeatedly become social trading events, including the Hyperliquid liquidation that left his account near $900. That visibility makes his account especially valuable to attackers trying to push a fast memecoin launch.

Solana memecoin risk is not limited to malicious code. Many losses come from social engineering, fake endorsement, coordinated buys, deployer control, low liquidity and token launches that never build beyond the first speculative wave. A hacked account can compress that entire cycle into minutes, giving retail traders almost no time to verify whether a post is real. Recently, South Korean prosecutors have charged a group accused of manipulating the Solana-based meme coin CATFI, marking the country’s first arrest and prosecution tied to a decentralized-exchange rug pull.

The safer response is simple: no token tied to a celebrity trader, influencer or hacked-looking account deserves instant trust. Traders should verify the original account recovery status, contract age, creator wallet behavior, liquidity depth, holder concentration and early sell patterns before entering. In fast memecoin markets, the first confirmation often arrives only after the exit has already happened.

For Wynn, the damage appears reputational rather than financial. For Solana memecoin traders, $WORLD is another reminder that social proof can be manufactured, hacked accounts can become launchpads, and a tiny market cap does not make a rug pull harmless.