What is Ronda On Sui (RONDA) crypto coin? The truth about a non-existent token

What is Ronda On Sui (RONDA) crypto coin? The truth about a non-existent token

There is no such thing as Ronda On Sui (RONDA) cryptocurrency. Not now. Not ever. If you’ve seen ads, social media posts, or YouTube videos promoting RONDA as a new Sui-based coin, you’re being misled. This isn’t a hidden gem waiting to be discovered-it’s a complete fabrication. No official records, no blockchain contracts, no exchange listings, and no community support exist for RONDA on the Sui network.

Why you won’t find RONDA anywhere

The Sui blockchain, launched in May 2023 by Mysten Labs, has a public, open ledger. Every token created on it is visible through the Sui Explorer. As of October 2023, there were over 217 tokens on Sui, according to BscScan’s tracker. None of them were named RONDA. The same applies to CoinGecko, CoinMarketCap, and the Sui Foundation’s official token registry-all empty for RONDA. Even the Sui GitHub repository, updated in late October 2023, contains zero references to this name.

There’s no contract address. No token standard. No liquidity pool. No whitepaper. No team. No website. Nothing. If a cryptocurrency doesn’t appear on any of these sources, it’s not real. It’s not early-stage. It’s not upcoming. It’s fiction.

Where did RONDA come from?

The name likely stems from confusion with Ondo Finance (ticker: ONDO), a real project on Ethereum that launched in August 2023. The phonetic similarity between “Ronda” and “Ondo” is enough to trick someone typing quickly or hearing the name in a video. But Ondo has nothing to do with Sui. It’s built on Ethereum, uses a different token standard, and has a completely different team and purpose.

Other possible mix-ups include:

  • Ronin (AXS sidechain for Axie Infinity)
  • Ripple (XRP, unrelated to Sui)
  • Elrond (a different blockchain entirely)

Scammers know people are hunting for the next big Sui coin. They create fake names that sound close to real projects, then push them on Telegram, TikTok, or Reddit. They’ll show fake charts, fake wallet balances, and fake testimonials. All to lure you into sending crypto to a wallet that’s under their control.

What does the Sui ecosystem actually look like?

Sui has real projects. Real tokens. Real usage. The native token, SUI, is the backbone of the network. As of September 2023, over 2.5 billion SUI tokens were in circulation. The top tokens on Sui include:

  • SUI (native token)
  • Cetus Protocol (DeFi exchange)
  • Scallop (lending protocol)
  • NAVI Protocol (derivatives)
  • SuiFrens (NFT collection)

These projects have audited smart contracts, documented teams, active Discord communities, and listings on major exchanges like Binance and KuCoin. RONDA has none of these. Not even one.

An investor misled by a fake crypto chart, surrounded by fading real Sui projects in comic style.

How to spot a fake crypto token

If someone tells you RONDA is the next big thing on Sui, here’s how to check if they’re lying:

  1. Search for RONDA on Sui Explorer. Type in any address or token name. If nothing shows up, it doesn’t exist.
  2. Check CoinGecko or CoinMarketCap. Search for “RONDA.” No results? That’s the answer.
  3. Look for a whitepaper. Real projects publish them. Fake ones don’t.
  4. Search Reddit and Twitter. Use r/SUI and search for “RONDA.” You’ll find zero legitimate posts.
  5. Check GitHub. Look for any Sui-related repository with “ronda” in the name. Nothing? Then it’s not real.

Real tokens have public code. Fake ones hide behind private wallets and anonymous Telegram groups.

What happens if you buy RONDA?

If you send money to a “RONDA” wallet, you’re not investing. You’re giving money to a scammer. Once you send crypto to a scam address, it’s gone forever. Blockchains don’t have undo buttons. No customer support. No chargebacks. No recovery.

Security firms like CertiK have warned that pump-and-dump scams on Sui often use names that sound like real projects-like Ondo, SuiFrens, or Cetus. But they’ve never seen a scam called RONDA because it’s not even worth pretending to be real. It’s just a placeholder name used by low-effort fraudsters.

A hero exposes crypto scams atop a blockchain tower as fraudsters flee in a Marvel-style illustration.

Where to find real Sui tokens

If you want to explore real projects on Sui, go to the official Sui dApp directory. It lists 78 verified projects as of October 2023. All of them have transparent teams, open-source code, and real use cases.

Start with SUI itself. It’s the fuel of the network. Then look at Cetus for trading, Scallop for lending, or SuiFrens for NFTs. These are projects with traction, not noise.

Final warning

No legitimate crypto project will ever ask you to buy a token before it’s listed on a major exchange. No real team will promote a coin only on TikTok or Telegram. No trustworthy project hides behind a fake website with no domain history and no contact info.

Ronda On Sui (RONDA) is not a coin. It’s not a project. It’s not even a rumor. It’s a scam. And if you’re still hearing about it in December 2025, someone is still trying to trick you. Don’t fall for it. Do your own research. Stick to verified projects. And never invest in something you can’t find on the blockchain.

Author

Diane Caddy

Diane Caddy

I am a crypto and equities analyst based in Wellington. I specialize in cryptocurrencies and stock markets and publish data-driven research and market commentary. I enjoy translating complex on-chain signals and earnings trends into clear insights for investors.

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Comments

  • Aaron Heaps Aaron Heaps December 24, 2025 AT 15:31 PM

    RONDA? More like RON-DOA. If you’re still chasing ghosts on Sui, maybe take a break from the screen and breathe.
    Just sayin’.

  • Tristan Bertles Tristan Bertles December 26, 2025 AT 15:09 PM

    Been there. Got the rug pulled. I thought I found the next big thing on Sui too. Turned out I was just reading a bot’s tweet.
    Good post. Real talk.
    Thanks for saving someone’s wallet.

  • Megan O'Brien Megan O'Brien December 27, 2025 AT 10:02 AM

    Zero on-chain footprint. No liquidity. No dev activity. No whitepaper. Classic red flags. This isn’t even a scam-it’s a placeholder for a scam that hasn’t been coded yet.
    It’s not even worth the gas to fake it.

  • Earlene Dollie Earlene Dollie December 28, 2025 AT 07:11 AM

    my soul just cried when i saw ronda on sui
    like someone took my dreams and set them on fire and then sold the ashes as nfts
    why do people do this to each other
    i just wanted to believe

  • Dusty Rogers Dusty Rogers December 29, 2025 AT 15:38 PM

    Every time I see this kind of post, I’m reminded why I don’t scroll crypto threads after midnight.
    It’s not just about losing money-it’s about losing trust in the whole ecosystem.
    Good job calling it out.

  • Kevin Karpiak Kevin Karpiak December 31, 2025 AT 13:45 PM

    USA built the internet. We don’t need some Indian scammer pretending to be a blockchain project.
    Real crypto is American. This is just crypto colonialism.

  • Helen Pieracacos Helen Pieracacos January 2, 2026 AT 04:55 AM

    Wow. So you’re saying if it’s not on CoinGecko, it’s not real?
    What about Dogecoin in 2013? Or Solana in 2020?
    Or… wait, you’re right. This isn’t even pretending to be a joke.

  • Dustin Bright Dustin Bright January 2, 2026 AT 14:35 PM

    this made me sad 😔
    people are so desperate for something to believe in
    and instead they get fake charts and fake promises
    why can't we just invest in real stuff?
    like sunshine and good coffee

  • Melissa Black Melissa Black January 2, 2026 AT 20:58 PM

    Tokenomics require verifiable on-chain presence. Absence of contract address, liquidity pool, or governance structure constitutes non-existence, not early-stage development.
    This is not a speculative opportunity-it’s a zero-probability event wrapped in social engineering.
    Do not confuse hype with foundation.

  • Rishav Ranjan Rishav Ranjan January 3, 2026 AT 06:42 AM

    ronda? never heard. but i saw ondo on binance. maybe they mixed it up.
    no need to overthink.

  • Sophia Wade Sophia Wade January 4, 2026 AT 20:02 PM

    There is a profound melancholy in the creation of phantom assets-entities conjured from phonetic echoes and the desperation of the uninitiated. RONDA is not merely a token; it is a mirror held up to the collective yearning for meaning in a decentralized chaos.
    It is the ghost in the machine we refuse to let die.

  • SHEFFIN ANTONY SHEFFIN ANTONY January 6, 2026 AT 05:53 AM

    Everyone here is acting like they’re the crypto police. RONDA might be fake, but you’re all acting like you invented blockchain.
    What if it’s just a private chain? What if it’s stealth-launched?
    You don’t know everything.

  • Zavier McGuire Zavier McGuire January 8, 2026 AT 02:11 AM

    why do people even fall for this
    it’s not hard to google
    you want to be rich so bad you’ll believe a name you heard in a tiktok comment
    pathetic

  • Sybille Wernheim Sybille Wernheim January 8, 2026 AT 12:51 PM

    you’re doing such a good job helping people stay safe 💪
    thank you for being the voice of reason in this wild wild web
    you’re a real hero

  • Cathy Bounchareune Cathy Bounchareune January 9, 2026 AT 08:28 AM

    in my village in Laos, people call every new thing ‘the next big thing’-even if it’s just a goat with a Bluetooth speaker.
    this RONDA thing? same energy.
    we laugh. then we eat rice.

  • Janet Combs Janet Combs January 10, 2026 AT 09:07 AM

    i just saw a video of someone holding a phone with ‘ronda on sui’ on screen and i thought… is this real? then i checked suiscan…
    nope. just another dream that got deleted.
    so sad.

  • Radha Reddy Radha Reddy January 11, 2026 AT 09:31 AM

    It is commendable to maintain intellectual rigor in the face of speculative noise. The absence of verifiable on-chain artifacts negates any claim of legitimacy. One must exercise due diligence, especially in decentralized environments where trust is not mediated by institutions.

  • Shubham Singh Shubham Singh January 12, 2026 AT 16:21 PM

    Only amateurs believe in tokens without whitepapers. You think you’re clever for spotting a fake? I spotted it before you woke up this morning.
    Also, you didn’t mention that RONDA was probably a bot farm from Bangladesh. Just saying.

  • Charles Freitas Charles Freitas January 12, 2026 AT 19:23 PM

    Oh wow, another one of you ‘crypto teachers’ who thinks you’re the only one who knows what’s real.
    What’s next? You’ll tell me Bitcoin isn’t a pyramid scheme?
    At least RONDA gives people hope.
    What do you give them? A 10-page blog post and a lecture on Sui Explorer?

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