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Beginner · Learning Resource

Votes for Sale: How Crypto 'Community Ranking' Sites Really Work

Beneath the big crypto directories sits a second tier: vote-ranking sites, where tokens climb a leaderboard powered by 'community votes'. The pitch is democratic — the crowd surfaces the gems. The reality, documented below in the platforms' and vote-sellers' own words, is that the votes are openly for sale at around $5 per thousand, promoted slots are a day-rate price list, and one platform's own terms and conditions state plainly that its promoted coins *'are paid advertisement… not verified coins'*. If a presale you're researching points to its ranking on one of these sites as social proof, this page shows you what that proof costs.

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Scam Watch — reader safety notice. This is independent editorial analysis based on publicly verifiable evidence — never financial advice. Crypto presales are extremely high-risk and largely unprotected in the UK: no FSCS cover, no Financial Ombudsman. Never send funds to a website you have not independently verified. How we verify · Risk disclaimer
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The 20-second version

A leaderboard whose votes retail at $5 per thousand is a price list, not a popularity contest. Vote-ranking sites sell visibility (that's their business, openly); third-party sellers sell the votes themselves; and the projects that buy both then quote their ranking back to you as 'community support'. Assign vote-based rankings zero evidential weight — here's what to check instead.

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What vote-ranking sites are

Sites like CoinVote (coinvote.cc — 'Discover early-stage crypto gems before they hit major platforms') and CoinHunt (coinhunt.cc — '#1 Platform to discover newest coins') list brand-new tokens, most of them too small or too early for the major trackers, and rank them by user votes. Both let projects submit a coin, both display a 'Promoted' section, and both invite projects to pay for visibility. Neither publishes a company registration number or postal address on the pages we reviewed — both name France as their governing jurisdiction, and that's roughly where the paper trail ends.

The part they say themselves

Credit where due: the platforms are semi-candid about the model, if you read the small print. When we checked (4 July 2026), CoinHunt's terms and conditions stated, verbatim: *'Any coin can be listed in the top Promoted coins section. These are paid advertisement. These are not verified coins.'* Its promote page sells the inventory by the day: a VIP spot at $15/day, a promoted spot at $25/day, search-bar ads at $35, banners at $50–$100 — 'no login required', no refunds. CoinVote's submission page pitches that *'promoted coins get significantly more traffic on average'*, its promoted slots are 'non-refundable', and its site-wide footer concedes that *'a token listed on coinvote.cc is not an endorsement, and some projects may be risky or fraudulent'*.

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Read that as a buyer

'Paid advertisement… not verified coins' is the platform telling you exactly what a promoted badge means. Take them at their word — the same rule we applied to Coin Gabbar's disclaimers. The small print is usually honest; it's the leaderboard that does the misleading.

The part the vote-sellers say

The rankings themselves are 'community votes' — CoinVote says each user may vote twice per hour; CoinHunt publishes no methodology at all. Enter the third-party vote-selling industry, whose own sales pages we reviewed on the same day. One seller retails CoinHunt votes at '$5 per 1,000' and CoinVote votes at '$6 per 1,000' (bulk discounts down to $3–4, 'quick promotion' at $7 per thousand), and helpfully coaches buyers: *'You need to get at least 2-3k votes to be in the top 10 list in a day.'* Another seller offers identical price ladders for both platforms — from '500 Votes - $200' up to '40k-50k Votes - $5000' — with the pitch *'The higher in the list, the more the audience will be interested in your coin!'*, and even sells accompanying reactions because they 'will show how real your votes are'. Multiple further sellers advertise the same service from $8–10.

To be precise about who's doing what: these are third-party sellers, not the platforms — we found no evidence that CoinVote or CoinHunt sell votes themselves, and no evidence they knowingly tolerate it. What the sellers' own price lists establish is simpler and sufficient: for a few pounds, anyone can move a token up these leaderboards. A 'top 10 community pick' can be manufactured for less than the cost of a takeaway.

Why this matters to you

Because these rankings get quoted upward. A presale buys votes, tops a list, then its paid press releases cite the ranking — 'the most-voted token on X this week' — as organic community momentum. By the time it reaches your feed, a $30 purchase has been laundered into social proof through three layers. It's the same manufactured-consensus machine as bought Telegram crowds, with a scoreboard attached.

  • Treat vote counts as decoration. They're the cheapest number in crypto to fake — cheaper than Telegram members.
  • A 'Promoted' tag means one thing: money changed hands. CoinHunt's own terms say exactly that.
  • Being listed means nothing either way — both platforms say so themselves in their disclaimers.
  • No prescribed UK risk warnings appear on these listings — the protections UK promotion rules exist to provide are absent here, so the compliance burden is entirely yours.
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In fairness

Both platforms do publish real warnings. CoinVote maintains a community blacklist of reported scam tokens alongside its rankings, and its risk notice appears on every page. CoinHunt's DYOR page is genuinely blunt — bluntly telling readers that without reading a contract's code *'you will never have 100% insurance on how a coin works'*, and that unlocked liquidity means *'the dev can take everything if they wish… you may wanna run away'*. Neither platform hides that it sells promotion. Our criticism isn't hypocrisy — it's that the product these sites present as their headline (a community-voted leaderboard) is structurally trivial to buy, whoever does the buying, and the projects that exploit that are counting on you not knowing.

What to use instead — and how we checked

Nothing on a vote board can't be checked better elsewhere, free: the team, the whitepaper, the on-chain money, and the full presale checklist. Several presales we've torn down in Scam Watch carried healthy vote-board rankings while failing every one of those checks.

How we checked (4 July 2026): direct review of coinvote.cc and coinhunt.cc — homepages, submission pages, promote/advertise pages, terms and conditions, DYOR and disclaimer pages, all quoted verbatim; direct review of multiple third-party vote-sellers' own sales pages and price lists; searches for company registration details (none found on either platform's pages). This article is independent editorial commentary in the public interest — not an allegation of unlawful conduct by either platform, and not financial advice. If you represent CoinVote or CoinHunt and believe anything here is inaccurate — or can evidence measures that defeat purchased votes — email hello@latestcrypto.co.uk and we will review and update promptly.

Key takeaways

  • CoinHunt's own terms: promoted coins 'are paid advertisement… not verified coins' — their words
  • Third-party sellers openly retail votes for both platforms from ~$5 per thousand, with top-10 coaching
  • The vote-sellers are third parties — platform complicity is not established, and we don't claim it
  • Vote-board rankings get laundered into press releases as 'community momentum'
  • Both platforms publish honest disclaimers and warnings — read those, not the leaderboard

Frequently asked questions

Are CoinVote and CoinHunt scams?

We don't say that, and the evidence doesn't either: both are functioning directories that openly sell promotion and publish real risk warnings — CoinVote even runs a scam blacklist. The problem is structural: their headline product, a vote-based ranking, can be moved for a few pounds by anyone, which makes it worthless as evidence about any token.

A token I'm researching is #1 on a vote site — does that mean anything?

It means it received the most votes — and votes retail at roughly $5 per thousand from sellers who coach projects on exactly how many buy a top-10 slot. Treat the ranking as unverifiable and run the real checks instead: team, whitepaper, audit, on-chain money.

Do the platforms themselves sell the votes?

No — we found no evidence of that. The platforms sell promoted slots and ads (openly, on their own pricing pages); the votes are sold by third-party services. The distinction matters, which is why we make it — but for your purposes the outcome is the same: the number can be bought.

LC

The Latest Crypto Team

Independent crypto education · free for all

We built LatestCrypto because we were fed up with the scams, shilling and terrible advice that fill the crypto internet. Everything here is free, honest and made with love — no hype, no “trust me bro”, and we’ll never tell you what to buy. Spotted something we got wrong? Tell us, and we’ll fix it.

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