CVTX Token Value Calculator
Calculate your CVTX token investment value based on the current market price ($0.0000425). This tool demonstrates how your investment has lost value since the token launch.
Current Price: $0.0000425 per CVTX token
Your Initial Tokens: 0 CVTX
Current Value: $0.00
Loss Amount: $0.00
Loss Percentage: 0.00%
Carrieverse (CVTX) was supposed to be the next big thing in social metaverses - a place where your real-life moments become digital assets you own, trade, and share. But today, it’s a ghost town. No avatars roam its virtual streets. No one is building virtual homes. The website barely loads. And the team? Silent since early 2024.
What Carrieverse Promised vs. What It Delivered
Carrieverse launched in early 2023 with big claims. It wasn’t just another crypto coin. It was the fuel for a life-logging metaverse built on Polygon, where you could create an avatar that mirrored your real life - recording your day, turning memories into NFTs, and selling them to others. You’d buy virtual land, decorate it, host events, and earn CVTX tokens for your content. The idea sounded like a mix of TikTok, Second Life, and Decentraland - but with you in full control of your data.
It wasn’t fantasy. The team had a roadmap: Cling Wallet for iOS and Android, CarrieVerse Land Parcel NFTs, PFP collections like ‘Kola From Space,’ and a game called ‘SuperKola Tactics.’ They even partnered with Polygon Studios, which gave them instant credibility. Their IEO on January 30-31, 2023, raised $120,000 at $0.07 per CVTX token. People bought in. Some even sold their Bitcoin to get in early.
Then, silence.
By mid-2024, the promised metaverse never opened. The ‘Grand OPEN’ date came and went. No updates. No explanations. The website stayed frozen as a marketing page - no login, no wallet, no interactive elements. Users who tried to access the platform found a blank screen or a loading spinner that never finished.
How CVTX Token Actually Works (Or Doesn’t)
Technically, CVTX is an ERC-20 token running on the Polygon blockchain. That means it’s cheap to transfer and works with most wallets like MetaMask. Total supply? 1 billion tokens. But here’s the catch: only about 207 million are in circulation - just 20.77% of the total. That leaves over 790 million tokens locked up, possibly with the team or early investors.
The token’s only real use case? Paying for things inside a metaverse that doesn’t exist. No apps. No games. No marketplaces. No way to spend it. So what’s driving its price? Nothing. At least not anymore.
Its all-time high was $0.2202 in February 2024. Today? Around $0.0000425. That’s a 99.98% drop. If you bought $500 worth at launch, you’d now have less than $0.20 left. And even that’s hard to cash out.
Why No One Can Sell CVTX
Liquidity is the killer. On July 2025, CVTX’s 24-hour trading volume was under $5,000. That’s less than what a single whale might trade in a major coin like Bitcoin. You can only trade it on two exchanges - MEXC and a tiny altcoin platform. No Binance. No Coinbase. No KuCoin.
When you try to sell, you’re forced to accept 10-15% slippage just to get your order filled. That means if you want to sell $100 worth, you might only get $85. And even then, you’re lucky if the trade goes through. Many users report orders stuck for hours, then canceled.
And the wallet? The promised Cling Wallet for mobile? Never released. You have to manually move CVTX from exchanges to your own wallet - and then you’re stuck with it. No app. No way to interact. Just a number in your MetaMask that keeps falling.
Who’s Behind Carrieverse? And Where Are They?
The team behind Carrieverse is anonymous. No LinkedIn profiles. No Twitter handles with verified badges. Just a website with a logo and a roadmap that’s now a graveyard of broken promises.
The only known backer is Alpha Token Capital - a firm that’s disappeared from public crypto circles since 2023. No press releases. No interviews. No new funding. No updates. It’s as if they walked away after the IEO.
Community forums tell the real story. On Reddit’s r/CryptoCurrency, users posted in June 2025: “Radio silence from the team since February 2024. Website is dead. Telegram has 1,200 members, but no one’s talking. Just bots.”
One user wrote: “Wasted $500 on CVTX during the hype cycle - website barely loads, promised metaverse never materialized. Classic case of taking funds and disappearing.”
On Bitcointalk, someone asked: “Is the Carrieverse metaverse real?” The top reply: “No. It’s a landing page with a token attached.”
How It Compares to Other Metaverse Coins
Carrieverse isn’t just failing - it’s failing in a space that’s already crowded with better alternatives.
- The Sandbox (SAND) has a $1.1 billion market cap and real games built by users. People actually play there.
- Decentraland (MANA) hosts virtual concerts, art galleries, and brand activations - even by major companies like Samsung and Adidas.
- Render Network (RNDR) lets users rent GPU power for 3D rendering and has a $3.2 billion valuation.
Carrieverse? Market cap: $9,000. That’s 0.00000021% of the total crypto market. It doesn’t even rank in the top 2,500 coins. It’s not a competitor - it’s an afterthought.
Is There Any Hope Left for CVTX?
Some price prediction sites still claim CVTX could reach $0.000144 by the end of 2025. But that’s like predicting a dead car will start if you shout at it.
There’s zero development activity. No GitHub commits. No new team members. No community events. No developer documentation. No API. No roadmap updates since 2023.
Experts at CryptoSlate called it “high-risk with near-certain failure probability.” LunarCrush, a social sentiment tracker, gave Carrieverse a “fear & greed” score of 12 out of 100 - the lowest possible. No one’s talking about it. No one’s buying it. No one’s building on it.
The only way CVTX could recover is if the team suddenly reappeared, released a working platform, and brought back trust. But after 18 months of silence? That’s not a scenario. It’s a fantasy.
What You Should Do If You Own CVTX
If you still hold CVTX, here’s the cold truth:
- Accept you’ve lost most of your money. The token is effectively worthless. Don’t expect a comeback.
- Don’t buy more. Adding more funds won’t fix it. You’re throwing good money after bad.
- Try to sell on MEXC. It’s the only exchange with any volume. Be ready for slippage and slow trades.
- Move your tokens to a personal wallet. If MEXC ever shuts down or delists CVTX, you’ll lose access forever. Keep it in MetaMask or another non-custodial wallet.
- Forget the metaverse dream. This project is dead. Move on.
There’s no magic fix. No rescue plan. No team coming back. Carrieverse is a textbook example of a crypto project that raised money on hype, made big promises, and vanished.
What This Teaches Us About Crypto Projects
Carrieverse isn’t unique. Thousands of projects like it launched during the 2021-2023 metaverse boom. Most failed. But Carrieverse stands out because of how clean the collapse was.
It had:
- A clear, relatable idea (life-logging metaverse)
- A reputable blockchain partner (Polygon)
- A real IEO with raised funds
- Marketing that looked professional
And still - nothing.
That’s the lesson: Don’t invest in ideas. Invest in execution. If a project doesn’t have a working product, active users, or regular updates - it’s not a crypto project. It’s a lottery ticket.
Carrieverse was never about building a metaverse. It was about collecting money from people who believed the dream. And now, the dream is gone. The token is a ghost. And the only thing left is a warning.
Gavin Jones
November 14, 2025 AT 08:47Wow, this is such a heartbreaking breakdown. I remember when CVTX was trending on Twitter-everyone was talking about ‘life-logging NFTs’ like it was the future. Now? Just a loading spinner and silence. It’s wild how fast hype turns to ghost town. I lost $300 on this too. At least now I know to check GitHub commits before investing. Lesson learned the hard way.