They spent millions on the Olympics. The medals didn't even survive the podium. If they can break gold, we can make gold.
"So there's the medal. And there's the ribbon. And here's the little piece that is supposed to go into the ribbon to hold the medal, and yeah, it came apart."
"My medal don't need the ribbon."
"A solution has been identified, and a targeted fix has been put in place."
Total Supply
Buy / Sell Tax
LP Burned (like the ribbons)
Unlike Milano Cortina QA
February 2026. Milano Cortina Winter Olympics. Athletes train their entire lives for a single moment on the podium. They win. They celebrate. The medal falls apart in their hands.
Breezy Johnson won downhill gold — and watched the ribbon detach at the press conference. Alysa Liu posted on Instagram: "My medal don't need the ribbon." The German biathlon team's bronze shattered mid-celebration. Ebba Andersson's medal fell in the snow and broke in two.
The internet did what the internet does. A meme was born. $BRKN is that meme, on-chain.
Turns out the medals had a safety cord designed to release under force so athletes don't choke. Noble idea. Terrible execution. The medals snapped off during normal celebrations — jumping, hugging, existing.
Organisers called it a "small number of medals" while rechecking every single one. The State Mint promises a fix. We promise a token.
Our ribbon never detaches. Our contract is unbreakable. $BRKN.
More reliable than an Olympic medal cord.
Total Supply (1 per broken dream)
Burned (like Milano's reputation)
Liquidity Pool (actually locked)
Community & Meme Fund
Unlike the medals, our roadmap holds together.
The meme ignites. Token deploys. Website launches. Telegram fills with broken medal memes.
Alysa Liu, German biathlon team, Ebba Andersson. DEX listings, CoinGecko & CMC, KOL partnerships.
Unique NFT drop — generative cracked, dented, and shattered Olympic medal art. Community merch store.
Tier-1 CEX listings. Cross-chain expansion. $BRKN DAO votes on the best Olympic fail memes of all time.
Our community is stronger than an Olympic medal ribbon. That's not saying much, but still.