By : Lockridge Okoth
Publisher : beincrypto
Date : April 1, 2026

Crypto’s Mass Exodus: Top Builders and Influencers Say They’re “Done” — But Are They?

On April 1, at least five prominent crypto figures posted farewell messages announcing they were permanently leaving the industry.

The posts spread quickly across X (Twitter), triggering confusion among followers unsure whether the announcements were serious or seasonal pranks.

Solana Builder Fires First Shot

Solana developer Codex published the most detailed exit post. He claimed to have built over 50 products on Solana, including the Seedless Wallet, before declaring the ecosystem broken beyond repair.

His criticism centered on pump.fun, the meme coin launchpad, where he said 99.9% of tokens launched have gone to zero.

He argued that most Solana (SOL) users never cared about actual products.

“I built seedless to make crypto actually usable… and most people just skipped the product to ape $SEED and ask why it hasn’t 100x’d yet,” wrote Codex.

He announced plans to open-source all 50+ projects and exit the space entirely.

A Wave of Dramatic Goodbyes

Elsewhere, crypto investor Evan Luthra posted his own farewell. His message was vague but emotional, referencing unnamed events and saying the space had taken things from him he would never recover.

Content creator Wise Advice followed with a similar tone. He claimed Bitcoin (BTC) had dropped 50% and that his community had gone quiet. He referenced surviving the Terra Luna collapse and the FTX bankruptcy before concluding he was done.

“…I don’t have answers anymore, and I refuse to pretend I do. I think I’m done,” they wrote.

Meanwhile, a builder known as Potato referenced Frank’s analysis of DeGods. Frank had argued that meme coin markets had structurally failed due to a shortage of new marginal buyers.

His thesis held that bonding curve mechanics were now fully understood by participants, leaving no one left to buy at higher market capitalizations.

Potato agreed and declared the game was over.

Separately, crypto analyst Rodrigo Moura Crypto posted about selling 145,000 Backpack (BP) tokens at a 50% loss, calling it his final word on the project.

April 1 Timing Raises Suspicion

All five posts appeared within hours of each other on April 1. None of the accounts deleted or corrected their messages immediately, leaving audiences divided between genuine concern and skepticism.

The crypto community has a long history of April Fools’ stunts. In past years, exchanges have faked token listings, and influencers have announced fictional pivots.

Whether deliberate satire or coordinated performance, the posts highlighted real frustrations that persist among builders.

Complaints about meme coin speculation replacing genuine product adoption, ecosystem retention failures, and exhausted buyer pools have circulated for months.

The April 1 wave simply packaged those grievances as theater.

The post Crypto’s Mass Exodus: Top Builders and Influencers Say They’re “Done” — But Are They? appeared first on BeInCrypto.

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