Magic Eden and several of its founders are facing a federal class action over claims that buyers were misled about the utility of the ME token before and after its 2024 launch.
The case, Pagan et al v. Lu et al, was filed on June 16 in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York. The named plaintiffs are Jaime Pagan, Ariel Ruano and Chris Sadowski. The defendants include Magic Eden CEO Jack Lu, Zhuoxun Yin, Sidney Zhang, Zhoujie Zhou, Euclid Labs Inc. and the ME Foundation.

The lawsuit does not plead securities-law claims. It relies on New York consumer-protection law, including General Business Law sections 349 and 350, along with negligent misrepresentation and unjust enrichment claims.
That framing keeps the case focused on consumer-facing marketing rather than whether ME was sold as an investment contract. The plaintiffs argue that buyers paid more for ME than they otherwise would have because the token was presented as having practical utility inside a larger Magic Eden ecosystem.
The ME token claims center on features plaintiffs say arrived late, changed materially or never launched as originally promoted.
The challenged promises include multi-chain functionality, ME DAO governance, staking rewards, trading incentives, revenue-sharing mechanics and buyback programs tied to platform activity. Plaintiffs also point to Magic Eden’s later refocus on Solana and discontinuation of some Bitcoin and Ethereum marketplace support as evidence that the broader multi-chain pitch did not hold.
Magic Eden had been positioned as a broad multi-chain NFT marketplace spanning Solana, Bitcoin, Ethereum and other ecosystems. The lawsuit argues that ME buyers were encouraged to view the token as part of that wider trading, rewards and governance layer.
The complaint also says governance voting did not become operational until roughly nine months after launch, while rewards were limited or seasonal rather than continuous. The plaintiffs argue those gaps created artificial demand and left buyers exposed once the token’s market price collapsed.
The consumer-protection route makes the Magic Eden case different from many crypto token disputes. Securities claims usually turn on whether buyers expected profits from the work of others. New York consumer-protection claims focus more directly on whether public marketing was misleading to ordinary consumers.
That approach has already appeared in other token-collapse lawsuits. A recent MOTHER token class action also focused on utility promises, consumer expectations and a sharp post-launch price decline rather than building the case only around securities law.
The Magic Eden allegations remain untested. A judge has not certified the proposed class, and the defendants have not been found liable. Magic Eden and the other defendants can still contest the claims, challenge the class structure or argue that broader crypto and NFT market weakness caused the losses.
ME recently traded near $0.058 to $0.06, with CoinMarketCap placing its market capitalization around $34 million and circulating supply near 579 million tokens. The case is docketed as 1:26-cv-03608 in the Eastern District of New York after its June 16 filing.
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