HECO Chain Airdrop: How It Works and What You Can Still Claim

When people talk about HECO Chain airdrop, a token distribution event on the HECO blockchain, a fast and low-cost Ethereum-compatible network launched by Huobi. Also known as HT Chain, it was built to handle DeFi and gaming tokens with near-zero fees and quick confirmations. Many users got free tokens during its peak in 2020–2021, but most of those airdrops are long over. Unlike Ethereum, where gas fees often made small airdrops impractical, HECO let projects give away tokens to thousands without breaking the bank. That’s why it became a hotspot for GameFi, DeFi, and meme coin launches—especially those tied to Binance Smart Chain users who wanted cheaper alternatives.

HECO Chain airdrops didn’t just happen randomly. They were usually tied to specific actions: holding HT tokens, using a DEX like MDEX, staking on a lending platform, or joining a community Discord. The Binance Smart Chain, a parallel blockchain to Ethereum that runs on a proof-of-staked-authority consensus and shares many tools with HECO was often the starting point—many users who qualified for HECO airdrops had already interacted with BSC projects. The two chains were practically twins in structure, so tools, wallets, and strategies overlapped heavily. But HECO had one big advantage: lower congestion. That made it ideal for projects needing to distribute tokens fast and cheap.

Now, most of those early airdrops are dead. Tokens like HERA, DOM, and TYT that were handed out on HECO trade for pennies—or worse, have zero volume. The network’s popularity faded after Huobi scaled back support, and developers moved to Solana, Base, or Arbitrum. But that doesn’t mean HECO is irrelevant. Some small teams still use it for niche projects, and if you held HT or used HECO-based wallets back then, you might still have unclaimed tokens sitting in an old wallet. You just need to know where to look—and how to avoid fake claims. Scammers love to prey on people who remember the old airdrop days, pushing fake websites that ask for seed phrases or charge "claim fees." Real airdrops never ask for your private keys.

What’s left in the HECO airdrop graveyard? A lot of failed games, abandoned DeFi apps, and tokens that promised the moon but delivered nothing. But buried in those failures are lessons: never trust a project that doesn’t have a public team, never rush to claim something that looks too easy, and always check if the token still has any trading activity. The best way to spot a real opportunity today? Look for projects actively building—not ones that just dropped a token and vanished.

Below, you’ll find real case studies of HECO Chain airdrops that actually happened, what went wrong, and which ones still have a pulse. No fluff. No hype. Just what you need to know to avoid repeating past mistakes.

November 29

Bird Finance (HECO) CMC×BIRD Airdrop: What Really Happened and Why It Never Existed

No CMC×BIRD airdrop ever existed. Bird Finance (HECO) was a failed DeFi project with zero trading volume and a dead contract. Learn why people got scammed, how to spot fake airdrops, and what really happened to BIRD tokens.

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