Have you ever created something out of pure internet absurdity? Like, not because you needed to or had some grand plan, but just because the moment was too good not to? Yeah, that was me last week. I launched a new token on Dogeparty, called Impersonator, and let me tell you—it’s probably one of my favorite little crypto troll babies to date.

So here’s the backstory, and trust me, it’s a good one.


The Ghost of Dogeparty Past

It all started when I was shooting the breeze on X (yeah, I still call it Twitter half the time, sue me) and I got into a thread with Adam B. Levine. If you’ve been around crypto since the ancient times of 2014, you might recognize that name. He was one of the original creators of Dogeparty, a platform that runs on top of the Dogecoin blockchain and lets people create tokens, NFTs, and other weird little digital knick-knacks.

Anyway, Adam drops this casual bomb: “Dogeparty died after 14 days. I have no idea who’s behind the current project.”

Hold up.

You mean to tell me this whole goofy revival of Dogeparty—the one with new tokens popping up like mushrooms after a rainstorm, Discord drama hotter than a jalapeño sauna, and more action figures than a 90s Toys “R” Us—is being run by complete strangers?

That’s when the lightbulb went off. Or maybe it was a meme neuron firing. Either way, I knew what I had to do.


Enter: Impersonator

I whipped up a new Dogeparty token and called it Impersonator. Total supply: 999. Why 999? Because it’s just shy of a thousand, which feels kinda punk rock. Plus, I like numbers that look like they belong on a cursed microwave.

The logo? An image of a Dogeparty impersonator action figure, posed like it just got caught sneaking into a VIP lounge with a fake lanyard. Think: Dollar Store superhero meets bootleg VHS cover art. It’s beautiful in that “what am I even looking at” kind of way.

But here’s the kicker: the whole point of the token is to celebrate the weirdness of it all. The impersonators. The revival. The fact that Dogeparty, this long-forgotten side quest of crypto history, is suddenly back from the dead like a zombie wearing a hoodie that says “wen moon?”

I mean, how often do you get to mint a token as a living meme?


The Culture of Pretend

There’s something oddly poetic about all this. In a space where everyone’s trying to be the next Satoshi or Vitalik, sometimes it’s way more fun to be the guy showing up with a cardboard crown, calling himself “King of Dogeparty,” and handing out tokens like they’re party favors at a 3rd grader’s birthday.

We live in a time where authenticity is blurry, especially online. Deepfakes are getting scarily good. Everyone’s an influencer or an AI bot. And in the middle of all that, I figured—why not just lean all the way in and make something that knows it’s ridiculous?

Impersonator isn’t trying to be the next big utility token. It’s not solving world hunger or decentralizing the ozone layer. It’s just a digital wink. A little reminder that crypto can be silly, messy, chaotic—and still kinda magical.


What’s Next?

Honestly? Who knows. I’ve already seen people start trading Impersonator on Dogeparty DEXs (shoutout to the three of you who bought it just to say you were early). Someone even suggested we make a comic series around the Impersonator action figure, which, I won’t lie, has serious meme potential.

Maybe I’ll airdrop a few tokens to folks who share their best impersonator stories. Like that time you faked knowing how to set up a crypto wallet in 2017 and almost sent your ETH to a pizza joint in Manila. Or when you pretended to be your own community manager because no one else was showing up. You know, the usual.


Final Thoughts

If there’s one thing I’ve learned after a decade in this space, it’s that crypto isn’t just about tech. It’s about culture. It’s about the memes, the moments, and yeah, sometimes the mayhem. Impersonator is my little tribute to all of that.

So if you’re feeling spicy and want to join the celebration, grab yourself an Impersonator token. Or don’t. It’s all just for fun anyway.

But if you see someone lurking in the Discord, claiming to be a Dogeparty OG with zero proof and a profile pic that looks like it was cropped from an old MySpace page…

Well. You might just be in the presence of a true Impersonator.


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