info

Greyhunt

GREYHUNT#12444
Key Metrics
Greyhunt Price
$3.49
0.02%
Change 1w
0.51%
24h Volume
$9,177
Market Cap
$312
Circulating Supply
22,845,990
Historical prices (in USDT)
yellow

What is Greyhunt?

Greyhunt is an AI-assisted crypto-intelligence terminal and Base-network ERC-20 token project designed to consolidate token fundamentals, vesting data, on-chain flows, liquidity signals, wallet activity, and social narratives into a single research interface rather than forcing users to assemble a view from explorers, DEX dashboards, unlock calendars, and social feeds. Its stated competitive advantage is not a new settlement layer or cryptographic primitive, but workflow compression: the project’s whitepaper describes a terminal where project fundamentals, on-chain anomalies, and social narratives are processed into a unified signal surface, with modules such as Deep-Sense Signal, Bot-Query, and Smart Alerts supported by a common data architecture. (greyhunt.gitbook.io)

Greyhunt occupies a niche application category rather than a base-layer infrastructure category.

As of mid-May 2026, public market-data sources placed HUNT in the small-to-mid-cap segment of crypto assets, with CoinGecko showing a market capitalization near the high-eight-figure range and a rank around the mid-300s, while DefiLlama tracked only token-market and yield-pool data rather than a protocol TVL dashboard.

That distinction matters: Greyhunt’s scale is better assessed through terminal usage, subscription conversion, staking participation, liquidity depth, and token-holder distribution than through chain-level metrics such as validator count or DeFi TVL, and public active-user data remains thin. (coingecko.com)

Who Founded Greyhunt and When?

Greyhunt’s public launch context points to early 2026, with BitMart announcing a primary HUNT/USDT listing for February 3, 2026, and tokenomics materials identifying the token generation event in the same period.

The project does not present the same founder transparency profile as large venture-backed protocols; CryptoRank lists “0xEml” as founder, while Greyhunt’s own legal materials state that the platform is operated by a U.S.-based legal entity without providing a broad, fully doxxed executive roster in the reviewed documentation. (bitmart.zendesk.com)

The project narrative has been consistent rather than evolutionary in the way Bitcoin moved from peer-to-peer cash to digital store-of-value or Ethereum from smart-contract substrate to modular settlement layer.

Greyhunt’s documentation frames the product around the “ten dashboards” problem in crypto research: fragmented token allocations, incomplete vesting trails, shallow liquidity, whale behavior, contract risk, and social sentiment.

Subsequent documentation updates have refined the architecture and access model, but the core story remains an intelligence-terminal thesis rather than a payments, DeFi, or rollup-scaling thesis. (greyhunt.gitbook.io)

How Does the Greyhunt Network Work?

Strictly speaking, Greyhunt is not its own blockchain network and does not operate a native consensus mechanism. HUNT is an ERC-20 token on Base at contract address 0x0981209bd6a8b2439271156f73c1a7722f1c1347, so settlement and execution depend on Base’s architecture rather than on Greyhunt validators, miners, or sequencers.

Base is an Ethereum Layer 2 built on the OP Stack, incubated by Coinbase, and designed to inherit Ethereum’s security properties while using rollup infrastructure for lower-cost execution; therefore Greyhunt’s token-level security is bounded by the HUNT smart contract, Base’s rollup design, Ethereum finality, and the operational assumptions around Base sequencing rather than by any independent Greyhunt consensus set. (basescan.org)

The Greyhunt application stack is described as a data-ingestion, validation, enrichment, and signal-processing system rather than a decentralized compute network. Its technical architecture describes ingestion across project fundamentals, on-chain flows, and social narratives; a validation pipeline that filters redundancy, flags anomalies, and applies confidence weights; and a processing layer that combines rule-based filters with ensemble language models.

The smart contract itself appears comparatively simple: BaseScan shows a verified ERC-20 contract with a 100 million HUNT maximum supply, 18 decimals, and no submitted contract-security audit, which means the main technical complexity sits off-chain in the intelligence terminal rather than on-chain in custom consensus, sharding, zero-knowledge proving, or validator-security design. (greyhunt.gitbook.io)

What Are the Tokenomics of greyhunt?

HUNT has a fixed maximum supply of 100 million tokens according to both the verified Base token page and Greyhunt’s token-allocation documentation.

The project’s token allocation assigns 45% to community incentives, 15% to airdrops, 20% to the team, 10% to investors, 5% to the foundation, and 5% to liquidity and listing, with 19.5% unlocked at TGE and the majority subject to multi-year vesting.

As of mid-May 2026, third-party tokenomics trackers showed a circulating supply in the low-20-million range, meaning headline market capitalization and fully diluted valuation can differ materially; that gap is economically important because future unlocks can create supply overhang even if the nominal maximum supply is capped. (greyhunt.gitbook.io)

HUNT’s utility is centered on access and incentive alignment rather than gas-fee capture. Greyhunt’s token utility page says users may unlock premium terminal access by staking HUNT or paying through fiat subscriptions, with higher tiers providing larger Bot-Query allowances, Smart Alert capacity, extended analytics, and fuller dashboard visibility.

The project also states that future airdrop seasons may prioritize platform engagement and that periodic burns are planned around platform performance and usage milestones, but those burn mechanics should be treated as roadmap-level claims unless and until burn transactions, formulas, and governance controls become transparently observable on-chain. (greyhunt.gitbook.io)

Who Is Using Greyhunt?

The available public data indicates that HUNT’s visible activity is still dominated by market access and speculative trading rather than by a large, independently verifiable base of recurring terminal users.

As of mid-May 2026, CoinGecko showed BitMart as the main centralized market for HUNT/USDT, with modest reported depth and volume relative to the asset’s implied valuation, while BaseScan showed a small on-chain holder base and low recent transfer counts on the Base token contract.

DefiLlama tracked several HUNT liquidity or yield pools, but it did not expose a public protocol-level TVL or active-user dashboard for the Greyhunt terminal, making it difficult to separate real SaaS-style adoption from token-market interest. (coingecko.com)

Legitimate external validation is limited. BitMart’s primary listing is a distribution milestone, not institutional adoption in the sense of an enterprise customer, regulated product integration, or balance-sheet allocation.

The reviewed public materials did not surface confirmed partnerships with asset managers, exchanges beyond listing venues, compliance firms, data vendors, or enterprise research desks using Greyhunt as production infrastructure.

The product is aimed at crypto traders, researchers, and communities monitoring token risk, but institutional traction should be considered unproven until Greyhunt discloses paying enterprise customers, auditable usage metrics, or formal integrations with recognized analytics or compliance providers. (bitmart.zendesk.com)

What Are the Risks and Challenges for Greyhunt?

Greyhunt carries regulatory exposure common to utility-token projects tied to access, staking, rewards, and future burns. Its own disclaimer states that token ownership does not confer governance rights, profit-sharing, equity, or legal claims, and that users are responsible for compliance in their own jurisdictions; this language reduces but does not eliminate classification risk, especially where staking access, token-based incentives, and expected platform growth may be scrutinized under local securities or consumer-protection frameworks.

As of the reviewed public record, no Greyhunt-specific SEC, CFTC, DOJ, or ETF-related action surfaced, but the absence of a visible enforcement action is not the same as affirmative regulatory clearance. (greyhunt.gitbook.io)

The larger near-term risk is execution and market-structure fragility. BaseScan shows no submitted contract-security audit for the token contract, a small holder count, and limited transfer activity, while exchange data has shown HUNT liquidity concentrated on a narrow venue set.

Competitively, Greyhunt is entering a crowded crypto-intelligence market that includes established dashboards, token-unlock trackers, wallet-labeling platforms, social-sentiment systems, on-chain forensic tools, and AI research assistants; many of those incumbents have deeper datasets, stronger brand trust, and institutional integrations.

Greyhunt’s economic threat is therefore not merely that another token competes with HUNT, but that its terminal must prove enough proprietary signal quality to justify staking or subscription behavior when users can already combine Arkham-style wallet intelligence, DefiLlama-style market data, DEX analytics, and social feeds without taking HUNT exposure. (basescan.org)

What Is the Future Outlook for Greyhunt?

Greyhunt’s outlook depends less on chain-level upgrades and more on whether its off-chain intelligence product can become a durable research workflow.

The verified roadmap-style items in the reviewed documentation include broader use of Smart Alerts, Bot-Query allowances, Deep-Sense dashboards, contribution incentives, future airdrop seasons tied to meaningful engagement, and planned periodic burns linked to platform performance.

The structural hurdles are substantial: the team must publish more transparent active-user data, clarify staking and burn execution, improve liquidity breadth, submit or disclose independent security review, and demonstrate that its AI-generated signals outperform a manually assembled stack of existing crypto-data tools.

No price forecast is warranted; the relevant question is whether Greyhunt can convert a token launch and a narrow exchange listing into a defensible analytics business with measurable retention, credible data provenance, and token utility that is more than a paywall wrapper. (greyhunt.gitbook.io)

Greyhunt info
Categories
Contracts
base
0x0981209…f1c1347