Roaring Kitty X hack claims spread across crypto and meme-stock circles after Keith Gill’s verified account briefly posted a Solana meme coin address, sending a new token called Red Kitten Crew, or RKC, into a rapid pump and collapse.
The posts appeared on May 11 and were deleted within about an hour. During that window, RKC reportedly jumped to roughly $11 million to $12 million in market value before falling sharply after the posts disappeared. No public statement from Gill has confirmed exactly what happened, so the safest wording is simple: the account appeared compromised, and traders treated the RKC promotion as suspicious.
For traders, the lesson is bigger than one token. A famous account, a fresh Solana contract, and a few minutes of hype can still move money fast.
Why the Roaring Kitty X Hack Claim Hit So Hard
Keith Gill, better known online as Roaring Kitty, is not a normal social media account in market culture. His GameStop posts helped define the 2021 meme-stock era, when retail traders turned one stock into a symbol of online market rebellion.
That history gives his account unusual power. If it posts after a long silence, people pay attention. If it posts a token address, some traders react before asking enough questions.
That appears to be what happened with RKC. Reports said Gill’s verified X account had been quiet for about 16 months before the deleted posts appeared. One post included a Solana Pump.fun-style token address, while another referenced “red bandit crew” language linked to the same meme coin theme.
That kind of setup is perfect for a fast scam. It uses recognition, urgency, and social proof. Traders see a trusted name and think they are early. By the time they check whether the signal is real, the chart may already be collapsing.
🚨 ROARING KITTY WAS HACKED… BY HIS OWN BROTHER
And then they rugged $1 MILLION with $RKC.This is actually insane.
Roaring Kitty’s X account was compromised. The hacker (or hackers) quickly launched a token called $RKC.
Within hours, they rugged it for around $1 million.… pic.twitter.com/S0pAY3Tvch
— disco stu (@discostumc) May 12, 2026
What Happened to the RKC Token?
RKC, short for Red Kitten Crew, was launched on Solana and gained attention because the deleted posts appeared to connect it to Roaring Kitty.
The token reportedly surged within minutes, with market cap estimates reaching around $12 million before sliding hard. Some reports said the token later dropped near $1.8 million, while others cited even deeper intraday damage as liquidity left the market.
That range shows why these stories need careful wording. Meme coin data can move quickly across decentralized markets, and different trackers may capture different moments. What is clear is the pattern: rapid spike, deleted posts, sharp selloff, and widespread warnings from traders.
On-chain investigator StarPlatinum claimed that more than 80 wallets extracted about $2.86 million, with attackers making more than $500,000. Those figures should be treated as third-party on-chain analysis rather than official findings, but they fit the broader concern that RKC was used as a coordinated pump-and-dump.
For anyone who bought late, the details matter less than the result. The token moved because of identity-based hype, not because of a product, revenue, or a verified announcement.
Why Solana Meme Coins Are Easy Targets
Solana has become the main home for fast meme coin launches because creating and trading tokens there is cheap and quick.
That is good for experimentation. It is also good for scammers.
A token can appear, trend, and collapse before many users have time to verify basic details. Pump.fun and similar launch tools make it easy for anyone to create a coin around a joke, a celebrity, a political moment, or a viral post. Most of those coins do not become lasting projects.
Research on Solana rug pulls has found that the low barrier to token creation has produced a large number of short-lived suspicious tokens. One 2026 paper studying Solana rug pulls said scams often rely less on complex malicious code and more on rapid market manipulation, wallet coordination, and price-driven behavior.
That matches the RKC warning signs. A famous account appears to post a contract. Traders rush in. Early wallets sell into the demand. The social signal disappears. The late buyers are left holding the risk.
This is not unique to Solana, but Solana’s speed makes the cycle especially fast.
Why Traders Should Be Careful With Celebrity Account Posts
A verified account is not the same as a verified investment.
That is the most important takeaway from the RKC episode. Social accounts can be hacked. Posts can be deleted. Screenshots can be faked. Even real posts can be misunderstood.
Crypto scammers know this. They target accounts with large followings because trust already exists. If they can post a token address from a famous account, they do not need to build a full marketing campaign. The audience is already there.
Before touching any token promoted through a sudden post, traders should ask simple questions. Is there an official website? Is there a real team? Is liquidity locked? Are insiders holding most of the supply? Did the account confirm the launch through multiple channels? Has the post stayed up long enough to be credible?
Even those checks do not remove risk, but skipping them is worse. Meme coin markets reward speed, but scams depend on panic buying.
In this case, the lack of confirmation from Gill should have been enough to slow traders down.
What Happens Next for RKC and Similar Tokens?
RKC may continue trading because meme coins often survive long after the original drama fades. Some traders may try to turn the controversy itself into a new narrative. That does not make the token safer.
The bigger issue is whether platforms, wallets, and social networks can respond faster when famous accounts appear to promote suspicious contracts. Account security is now a market protection issue, not just a personal privacy issue.
For crypto users, the safest rule is boring but effective. Treat surprise token posts from celebrities, influencers, and public figures as suspicious until they are confirmed through multiple official channels.
If a post looks urgent, strange, or out of character, assume that is the point. Scams are designed to make hesitation feel expensive.
Key Takeaway
The Roaring Kitty RKC incident shows how fast crypto scams can move when they borrow trust from a famous name.
Traders do not need a complicated lesson here. A sudden token address from a celebrity account is not proof of anything. It may be a hack, a fakeout, or a trap designed to turn recognition into exit liquidity.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice. Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.


















