Solana-based “GO” platform by Pump.fun debuted on June 4 with the slogan “Pay ANYONE to do ANYTHING”. It immediately attracted a wave of wild bounty listings.
Within hours of launch, users had posted hundreds of paid tasks on social media, offering cryptocurrency rewards for everything from live stunts to publicity stunts.
Source: X
To post a bounty, users have to fund it upfront through an escrow system. As of early June, GO listed 234 active bounties and 494 submissions. About $118,000 in rewards had remained unclaimed.
Pump.fun had previously built its reputation as a memecoin launchpad, but GO represents a new experiment in crowd-sourced incentives.
The bankless media outlet reports that “Pump.fun launched GO today, a bounty platform that lets users pay anyone to complete any task, with funds held in escrow until Pump.fun reviews the submission”.
In its own announcement, Pump.fun touted the platform as a way to “leverage the power of humans & money” worldwide. Investors and analysts note this is a pivot away from pure token launches toward broader crypto community engagement.
The tasks on Pump.fun GO have been unusually extreme and attention-grabbing. For example, one bounty offered about $50,000 for “someone to Skydive into a World Cup match in a memecoin mascot costume,” requiring live video proof.
Another $23,525 task promised payment to anyone who could “Interview Henry Nowak’s killer’s family or the lead police officer” in that high-profile murder case.
Source: Pump.fun
A sample of other posted tasks includes challenging people to break a world running record ($15,204), organizing a novelty “NEET March” in New York ($12,199), and permanently tattooing a crypto token sticker on one’s forehead for $2,650.
Several bounties quickly drew attention online, ranging from public challenges to unusual real-world tasks tied to crypto rewards.
These listings have drawn crowds; some users even livestream their attempts on other platforms to grab the bounties.
The attention-grabbing nature of the tasks has prompted comparisons to influencer stunts and reality TV giveaways, but they are all governed by Pump.fun’s rules: each task must be posted with a clear reward and submission requirements, and Pump.fun claims editorial discretion over what is allowed on the platform.
Source: Pump.fun
Despite the eye-popping posted rewards, actual payouts on Pump.fun GO have so far been modest. The actual money has been thin since the launch, and the largest single payout recorded is only $487.11.
In fact, since GO went live, the top earner has collected $487.11 for one completed task, with the next-highest payments at around $346.72 and $275.49. By comparison, the biggest bounty spender has paid out only $1,707 across 11 tasks.
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