RACA × Cambridge Airdrop: What We Know and What You Need to Do
Jan, 30 2026
There’s no official confirmation from RACA (Radio Caca) about a Cambridge airdrop. Not on their website. Not on their Twitter. Not in any of their Discord or Telegram channels. If you’ve seen posts claiming RACA is handing out free tokens tied to Cambridge, you’re likely seeing rumors, scams, or outdated info from 2024.
The name ‘RACA’ has been floating around crypto circles since 2021, mostly tied to the Radio Caca ecosystem - a blockchain-based gaming and metaverse project. Their native token, RACA, traded on exchanges like Gate.io and MEXC, and had a few small airdrops in 2023 and early 2024. But none ever mentioned Cambridge. Not as a university. Not as a city. Not as a partner.
Cambridge, Massachusetts - home to Harvard and MIT - has no known crypto partnerships with RACA. There’s no press release, no joint announcement, no whitepaper update linking the two. Even if you search the RACA official blog or their GitHub repo, you won’t find a single mention of Cambridge in the context of token distribution.
So why does this rumor keep popping up? Because people want free crypto. And scammers know that. They’ll make fake websites that look like RACA’s, use logos pulled from their social media, and say ‘Join the Cambridge Airdrop’ to trick you into connecting your wallet. Once you do, they drain your funds. In 2025, over 12% of all reported crypto scams involved fake airdrops, according to Chainalysis. And RACA’s name has been used in at least three of them this year alone.
Here’s what you should do instead of chasing rumors:
- Go straight to the source. Visit radiocaca.com. If there’s an airdrop, it’ll be on the homepage, in the announcements section, or in their verified Twitter/X account. Anything else is unverified.
- Check for snapshots. Real airdrops announce a specific block height or wallet snapshot date. No snapshot? No legitimacy.
- Never connect your wallet to unknown sites. Even if the site looks real, if it’s not linked from RACA’s official channels, it’s dangerous. Wallets don’t need to be connected to claim an airdrop - you should only sign a transaction after you’ve confirmed the contract address.
- Look for vesting schedules. Legit airdrops often lock tokens for 30 to 90 days. If a site says ‘claim now, get 10,000 RACA instantly’ - that’s a red flag. Most airdrops distribute fractions of a token, not life-changing sums.
What about the ‘RACA Airdrop 2025’ listing on AirdropBee.com? That site is a third-party aggregator. It doesn’t verify claims. It just lists what people submit. In 2024, over 60% of listings on similar sites turned out to be fake or abandoned. AirdropBee has no partnership with RACA. Don’t treat it like an official source.
Radio Caca’s last known token distribution was in February 2024, when they gave out 500 million RACA to holders of their previous token, USDRAC, and to users who staked in their NFT marketplace. That distribution was fully documented. No Cambridge involved. No mystery partners. Just clear rules and public contracts.
If RACA ever does launch a Cambridge-related campaign - say, a university research partnership or a hackathon - they’ll announce it through their official channels with a press kit, a timeline, and a smart contract address you can verify on Etherscan or BSCScan. Until then, treat any ‘Cambridge airdrop’ as a warning sign, not a reward.
Real crypto projects don’t hide their airdrops. They don’t rely on vague social media posts. They don’t ask you to download apps or enter private keys. They publish everything openly. If you’re waiting for a RACA airdrop, keep an eye on their official channels. But don’t lose sleep over a Cambridge connection that doesn’t exist.
And if you already connected your wallet to a site claiming to be the RACA × Cambridge airdrop? Stop using that wallet. Move your funds to a new one. Check your transaction history on Etherscan. If you see any unusual transfers - especially to unfamiliar addresses - you’ve been scammed. Report it to the platform you used and warn others.
There’s no shortcut to safe crypto. No magic link. No secret partnership. Just patience, verification, and caution.