TECHNOLOGY

SUPERFORTUNE Probes GUA Transfer Incident

Image Credit: Shutterstock

SUPERFORTUNE AI said it is investigating a security incident involving its GUA token after funds meant for an airdrop-related transfer were sent to a different address during a multisignature transaction on May 27.

The project said the destination address may have been altered during execution. It also said the incident triggered severe price volatility in GUA.

May 27 Multisig Transfer Sent GUA Elsewhere

SUPERFORTUNE said the transfer was supposed to send additional unlocked tokens to an airdrop claim contract. Instead, the funds were routed to another address believed to be controlled by an attacker.

An early review pointed to possible address manipulation in the multisig flow rather than a confirmed exploit in the GUA token contract itself. That distinction matters because the project has not yet said the token contract was compromised.

Address Poisoning Appears Less Likely

SUPERFORTUNE said the suspicious destination address had no prior interaction with SUPERFORTUNE-related wallets. That made a standard address-poisoning explanation less likely, according to the project’s early review.

The team also said it already uses multiple address-verification checks in its multisig process. Those controls did not stop the wrong transfer from going through, leaving open questions about whether the problem came from compromised tooling, operational error or a deeper attack path inside the multisig workflow.

GUA Falls After Reported 15M-Token Dump

The market reaction was sharp. GUA fell more than 60% on the day, with market trackers describing the selloff as one of the token’s steepest since launch.

Some market reports said 15 million GUA were dumped over nine hours and linked the move to a price drop of about 75%. SUPERFORTUNE has not yet confirmed the full amount involved or whether any of the diverted funds can still be recovered.

Multisig Cause Remains Unresolved

For now, the core issue is still under investigation. SUPERFORTUNE has not confirmed whether the transfer was caused by address tampering, compromised tools, signer error or another weakness in the multisig process.

Until the team publishes a fuller postmortem, the incident remains an active investigation rather than a settled exploit narrative.

The immediate risk for GUA holders is uncertainty. The project says it is investigating the wrong-address transfer, while the market is still reacting to the possibility that a multisig workflow failure allowed tokens intended for an airdrop contract to be redirected elsewhere.

More For You

Radiant Winds Down After $50M Hack
BUSINESS

Radiant Winds Down After $50M Hack

Radiant Capital plans to wind down operations following its 2024 hack, marking the end of the DeFi lending…

Jun 3, 2026 2 min read
Humanity Jumps 233% as AI Tokens Rally
MARKETS

Humanity Jumps 233% as AI Tokens Rally

Human, NEAR, and WorldCoin surged as investors rotated into AI-focused crypto projects, boosting momentum across the sector.

Jun 3, 2026 2 min read
Gnosis Pay Exploit Hits Delay Module
TECHNOLOGY

Gnosis Pay Exploit Hits Delay Module

A flaw in Gnosis Pay’s delay module was exploited, raising security concerns and prompting a review of affected…

Jun 3, 2026 2 min read
Kelp DAO Hacker Launders Most of $220M
TECHNOLOGY

Kelp DAO Hacker Launders Most of $220M

Recovery hopes dimmed after $220M linked to the Kelp incident was allegedly laundered, complicating efforts to trace funds.

Jun 3, 2026 2 min read
White Hat Unlocks $2M From 2016 ICO
TECHNOLOGY

White Hat Unlocks $2M From 2016 ICO

HongCoin recovered $2M trapped since its 2016 ICO by fixing a faulty smart contract, unlocking funds after nearly…

Jun 2, 2026 2 min read
Explore More News