TL;DR:
- RKC surged to an $11 million market cap after Roaring Kittyās X account posted its ticker and contract address, then collapsed 67%.
- Lookonchain said the developer sold $611,000 in RKC and collected $118,000 in Pump.fun creator fees, totaling about $729,000.
- A trader lost $188,600 within roughly one hour, highlighting how concentrated supply, sniping and celebrity-linked hype can punish late memecoin buyers fast during thin launch-market conditions today.
A Solana-based memecoin tied to Keith Gillās Roaring Kitty X account collapsed after its developer cashed out about $729,000, turning a viral ticker post into another brutal lesson in memecoin market structure. Red Kitten Crew, or RKC, briefly surged to an $11 million market capitalization after Gillās account posted the tokenās ticker and contract address, then fell about 67% to $3.6 million after the post was deleted. The Roaring Kitty link created instant liquidity, but it also raised the uncomfortable question traders dread: was this hype, coordination, or an account compromise?
Roaring Kitty(@TheRoaringKitty) posted $RKC, then deleted the post, causing $RKC to crash 90%!
But the $RKC dev had already cashed out 6,260 $SOL ($611K).
He spent 20 $SOL($1,950) across 10 wallets to buy 395.18M $RKC, 39.52% of the total supply, then dumped it all for 5,071⦠pic.twitter.com/2RMd0mYGjF
— Lookonchain (@lookonchain) May 12, 2026
RKC Crash Exposes Memecoin Launch Risk
The developerās exit is what made the episode especially explosive. Blockchain analytics firm Lookonchain said the developer sold about $611,000 worth of RKC and collected another $118,000 in creator fees through Pump.fun, bringing the total to roughly $729,000. Creator-linked supply concentration shaped the trade, because the developer reportedly used 10 wallets to buy 395.18 million RKC, equal to 39.52% of total supply. That structure suggests early wallets controlled a dominant position before later buyers arrived, making the subsequent selloff feel less like normal volatility and more like value extraction from retail demand.
The timing made the story even stranger. Gillās X account had been inactive for more than 15 months before the now-deleted RKC post appeared, immediately prompting speculation about whether the account was still under his control. The account-security question became central, because Gill is not an ordinary market commentator. His Roaring Kitty persona helped ignite the 2021 GameStop short squeeze, when retail traders piled into GME and forced short sellers such as Citron Research to unwind losing positions. In that context, a single post was enough to animate traders before verification caught up.
The damage was not abstract. One trader spent $250,000 buying 31.15 million RKC shortly before the post disappeared, then sold the position for $62,200, taking a $188,600 loss within roughly an hour. Late buyers absorbed the downside, underscoring how quickly celebrity-linked or suspected celebrity-linked memecoins can turn from opportunity into exit liquidity. The RKC crash also fits a wider pattern of sniping and concentrated launches, where early wallets capture supply, social signals ignite demand and retail traders discover too late that momentum alone is not the same as a defensible market, especially when ownership is opaque and exits happen faster than proper onchain disclosure.






