The Lucky Block story starts with one of the most dramatic early-stage runs in crypto history.
The presale was scheduled to close on February 1, 2022. It sold out eleven days early — January 21 — with 9,000 holders having invested $6 million before the token had even traded publicly. It listed on PancakeSwap on January 26, 2022. By February 21 — exactly 26 days after it first went live — LBLOCK had hit a $1 billion market cap.
In April 2026, Lucky Block V1 trades at approximately $0.0000001 per token. That’s not a typo. It’s a sub-millionth of a dollar — a price so small that most exchanges have stopped tracking it as a meaningful market.
The story of how a $1 billion token got there, what the project became after V1, and whether any scenario exists for recovery over the next four years is what this analysis covers.
Lucky Block launched on December 3, 2021 on Binance Smart Chain with a genuinely simple thesis: lotteries are opaque, centralised, and unfair to participants. Blockchain technology could fix all three problems simultaneously.
Traditional lotteries generate results through proprietary algorithms that only the operator can audit. Prize distributions are controlled by the same entity selling tickets. Fees are high. Entry is geographically restricted. And — perhaps most importantly — players have to trust that the odds are what the operator claims they are.
The Lucky Block model proposed using BSC’s smart contracts and public blockchain transparency to run lottery draws where every transaction, every ticket, and every result was verifiable by anyone. The native LBLOCK token would be both the entry mechanism and the reward currency. Ten percent of every prize pot would be distributed to all LBLOCK holders as a passive dividend — meaning you earned from the platform simply by holding the token, regardless of whether you entered any specific draw.
That dividend mechanic was the core hook. It created a direct, calculable link between platform revenue and token value. The more people used Lucky Block for lottery draws, the more revenue flowed to holders. It wasn’t a meme coin with no underlying value proposition. It was, at least in theory, a yield-generating asset.
The tokenomics supported this: out of the 100 billion total supply, 60% was allocated for jackpot prizes and ecosystem rewards, 20% for marketing, 10% for the team (with a 12-month vesting lock), and 10% for liquidity provision. The maximum supply was fixed at 100 billion — no ongoing inflation, no additional minting.
The presale closed early. The PancakeSwap listing arrived ahead of schedule. And then, for approximately six weeks, LBLOCK became one of the most watched tokens in small-cap crypto.
The mechanics of why it moved so fast: a fixed supply of 100 billion with only a fraction trading on PancakeSwap in early weeks. Thin liquidity means even modest buying pressure drives explosive percentage moves. The passive holder dividend narrative was perfectly timed for a market that was still in bull mode in January and early February 2022. YouTube and Twitter influencers picked it up rapidly.
The price went from sub-cent fractions on listing day to an all-time high of approximately $0.009617–$0.009852 in February/March 2022. At that price, the fully diluted market cap hit approximately $1 billion — extraordinary for a project that had been live for under a month.
For context: if you bought in the presale and sold anywhere near the ATH, you earned approximately a 15–20x return in under six weeks. Early PancakeSwap buyers made far more. The BSC liquidity pool was thin enough that even small sell orders moved the price significantly in both directions.
The decline from $0.009617 to $0.0000001 — roughly a 99.999% drawdown — happened in several stages that compound on each other and are worth understanding separately.
Stage One: Bull market ended (Q1–Q2 2022). Almost every altcoin peaked in January–February 2022 and declined through the first half of the year. The broader crypto market hit its cycle top, and small-cap tokens with concentrated liquidity pools fell furthest. LBLOCK V1 fell from ~$0.009 to ~$0.002 by May 2022 primarily because of macro conditions, not anything specific to Lucky Block.
Stage Two: The lottery pivot struggled to gain traction. The core lottery product — the blockchain-transparent draw mechanism with LBLOCK dividends — required actual users to fund the prize pools. In the months following launch, the team ran draws and promoted the platform, but mass adoption of a novel lottery model takes time. Without the user growth to fund meaningful jackpots, the dividend yield to LBLOCK holders was small — reducing the fundamental case for holding.
Stage Three: V2 launched, fragmenting attention and liquidity. Lucky Block’s team recognised that the BSC-based V1 token had limitations and launched LBLOCK V2 on Ethereum. This was a strategic pivot from lottery to full casino-and-sportsbook platform. V2 is a different contract, a different chain, and a different ecosystem focus — it’s no longer specifically about blockchain lottery. It’s a broad iGaming platform with 5,000+ games, live casino, sports betting, a Telegram-based casino, staking, and partnerships with VfB Stuttgart and UFC legend Michael Bisping.
The V2 pivot was commercially logical. The casino-and-sportsbook market is larger and more immediately monetisable than a pure lottery concept. But for V1 holders, it created a difficult reality: the project that issued their tokens had effectively shifted to a new token on a different chain. V1 continued trading on BSC, but as the development energy and marketing budget moved to V2, V1’s trading volume and community attention evaporated.
Stage Four: BSC ecosystem migration. Lucky Block V1 is a BEP-20 token on Binance Smart Chain. As the project moved to Ethereum for V2, liquidity shifted. Anyone looking at Lucky Block Casino today is directed to V2 (Ethereum). V1 is listed as a legacy token by data aggregators, with CoinMarketCap showing essentially zero volume and CoinGecko showing market cap of under $1 million for V2 (which has the same ticker on a different chain).
By April 2026, LBLOCK V1’s daily trading volume is typically $0–$172 — not thousands, not hundreds of thousands. Just $172 on an active day. That’s a token with essentially no market.
This is the most important practical point for anyone arriving at this article from a search.
LBLOCK V1 (BSC): The original Binance Smart Chain token. Contract: 0x2cD96e8C3FF6b5E01169F6E3b61D28204E7810Bb. Trades on PancakeSwap and LBank at prices around $0.0000001. Market cap essentially unreportable. This is the token whose presale history and January 2022 ATH you’ve read about. The project’s current casino ecosystem does NOT run on this token.
LBLOCK V2 (Ethereum): The active token that fuels Lucky Block Casino. Trades at approximately $0.0000096 (roughly 100x more than V1 per unit). Available on Uniswap, MEXC, LBank, and other exchanges. Market cap approximately $840,000–$900,000. This is the token relevant to the current casino and sportsbook operations.
Both are down over 99% from their respective all-time highs. Both exist in thin liquidity environments. But V2 is the operationally active token — it’s what the casino uses for rakebacks, staking rewards, jackpot entries, and Platinum Rollers Club NFT perks. V1 is a legacy BSC token that exists because it was never explicitly burned or deprecated, but it’s not what the project is building around.
If someone asks whether Lucky Block is a working project in 2026: the answer is yes, but they mean V2. If someone asks whether LBLOCK V1 has recovery potential: the honest answer requires acknowledging that V1 is essentially disconnected from whatever upside Lucky Block Casino might generate in the future.
The platform has carved out a niche in accessible, simple crypto gambling — not the most feature-rich option, but designed for users who want speed and clarity.
The V2 ecosystem as of 2026 includes:
5,000+ casino games including slots, table games, live dealer, and the Telegram-based casino that allows play without visiting a web browser.
Sports betting and sportsbook covering major global leagues and events, accessible with LBLOCK V2 and other accepted cryptocurrencies.
Platinum Rollers Club NFTs — only 3,500 minted, these grant VIP access, enhanced jackpot ticket multipliers, and exclusive gaming opportunities. Scarcity at 3,500 units makes them a meaningful collector item if the platform grows.
Staking and rakebacks — up to 15% cashback for LBLOCK V2 stakers, with additional jackpot entries and exclusive promotional access.
High-profile partnerships — VfB Stuttgart as exclusive Asian partner (Bundesliga’s marketing reach into Asia is substantial), and Michael Bisping as a brand ambassador providing recognition in MMA-following audiences.
The V1 connection to this ecosystem: Almost none in operational terms. V1 holders don’t automatically receive V2 ecosystem benefits. The dividend mechanic from V1’s original lottery concept was tied to V1-specific draws, not the current V2 casino architecture.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Token | Lucky Block V1 (LBLOCK) |
| Chain | Binance Smart Chain (BEP-20) |
| Contract | 0x2cD96e8C3FF6b5E01169F6E3b61D28204E7810Bb |
| Current Price (V1) | ~$0.0000001–$0.00000014 |
| All-Time High (V1) | ~$0.009617–$0.009852 (Feb–Mar 2022) |
| All-Time Low (V1) | ~$0.000000002 (near zero) |
| Distance from ATH | ~99.999% below |
| 52-Week Range (V1) | ~$0.0000075–$0.0000935 |
| Max Supply | 100 billion LBLOCK |
| Total Supply | ~99.6 billion |
| Market Cap (V1) | Effectively unreportable (~$0) |
| Daily Volume (V1) | ~$0–$172 (near zero) |
| CMC Rank | ~#6255 (rank reflects dead market) |
| Launched | December 3, 2021 |
| Presale sold out | January 21, 2022 ($6M, 9,000 holders) |
| Exchange listed | January 26, 2022 (PancakeSwap) |
| $1B market cap date | February 21, 2022 |
| Team | Scott Ryder (CEO), James Bason (CPO), James Thatcher (CTO) |
| V2 Token (active) | LBLOCK V2 on Ethereum ~$0.0000096 |
| V2 Market Cap | ~$840,000–$900,000 |
| Casino games | 5,000+ (V2 ecosystem) |
| Platinum Rollers NFTs | 3,500 minted |
| Partners | VfB Stuttgart, Michael Bisping |
| V1 primary exchanges | PancakeSwap, LBank |
| V2 primary exchanges | Uniswap V2, MEXC, LBank |
Sources: CoinGecko — LBLOCK; CoinMarketCap — LBLOCK V1; CoinLore
The honest 2026 price prediction for LBLOCK V1 requires acknowledging what the token actually is at this point.
V1 is not a live ecosystem token. The project’s casino, NFT rewards, staking, and partnerships all operate through V2 on Ethereum. V1 exists on BSC in a state of benign neglect — the contract persists, PancakeSwap liquidity technically exists, and prices are quoted on data aggregators. But the operational substance that originally justified V1’s valuation has migrated to a different token on a different chain.
This creates a specific set of scenarios for 2026:
Scenario A (most likely): Continued near-zero. Without any catalyst specific to V1, the token continues trading at sub-millionth-of-a-dollar prices with daily volumes under $200. Nobody is actively buying V1 for utility, and the holding community has largely moved on. Price remains in the $0.0000001–$0.00000020 range.
Scenario B: Speculative micro-cap pump. V1’s extremely low price creates mathematical lottery ticket appeal. A token at $0.0000001 only needs to reach $0.0001 to represent a 1,000x return. In highly speculative altcoin seasons, dead BSC tokens with recognisable names occasionally experience short-lived pumps driven by retail FOMO. This has happened to other abandoned BSC tokens multiple times. It doesn’t represent fundamental recovery — it’s a speculative event that reverses quickly. In this scenario, V1 could briefly reach $0.0000005–$0.000005 before returning to near-zero.
Scenario C (very unlikely): V1 revival or official V1-to-V2 migration. If the Lucky Block team ever launched an official V1-to-V2 conversion mechanism — offering V1 holders a defined exchange ratio — it could temporarily spike V1’s price as speculators buy V1 hoping to convert at a better rate than market. This seems unlikely given the time elapsed and the lack of public communication about any such plans.
| Scenario | 2026 V1 Range | What drives it |
|---|---|---|
| Status quo | $0.0000001–$0.0000002 | Legacy token with no active use case |
| Speculative pump | $0.0000005–$0.000005 | Retail FOMO in altcoin season, thin BSC liquidity |
| Migration event | $0.000001–$0.00001 | Official V1-to-V2 conversion announcement |
| V1 revival | $0.00001–$0.0001 | Unlikely — would require project pivot back to V1 |
The $0.009617 all-time high implies V1 would need to rally approximately 96,000x from current prices to return there. There is no realistic scenario in which that happens. The ATH was a product of thin liquidity, extreme bull market speculation, and a time when V1 was the only LBLOCK token — none of those conditions exist any more.
Since V2 is the token actually connected to Lucky Block’s casino operations, a realistic analysis of “Lucky Block” price potential in 2026–2030 necessarily means discussing V2.
V2 at ~$0.0000096 with a ~$850,000 market cap is one of the smallest-cap active casino tokens. The crypto gambling sector has been growing steadily — decentralised, anonymous, instant-withdrawal platforms are capturing users who can’t or won’t use traditional online gambling with fiat. Lucky Block’s casino has genuinely differentiating features: the VfB Stuttgart partnership gives it credibility in Asian sports betting markets, Michael Bisping gives it recognition in combat sports audiences, and the Telegram casino integration gives it distribution in mobile-first markets.
If Lucky Block Casino grows its player base meaningfully, V2 has mechanics that should reflect that: staking rewards, rakebacks, and jackpot entries all require LBLOCK V2, creating genuine buy pressure as the player base grows. The broader GameFi and iGaming evolution continues shaping how crypto and entertainment intersect — and platforms like Lucky Block sit in a space that’s likely to benefit from regulatory tailwinds in jurisdictions that are adopting clear crypto gambling frameworks.
V2 reaching $0.0001 by 2028–2030 in a favourable scenario would represent roughly a 10x from current prices. At that price, the market cap would still be under $10 million — a small-cap token by any standard. A $0.001 V2 price by 2030 (100x) would imply a ~$100 million market cap, which would make it competitive with mid-tier crypto casino tokens. Neither scenario is impossible given the size of the market — but both require significantly more casino adoption than has materialised to date.
If you arrived at this article because you hold LBLOCK V1 and are wondering whether to hold or sell: the answer depends on what you’re comparing.
At $0.0000001 per token, the price cannot go below zero. The contract can’t be shut down. If you hold V1 in a wallet, you don’t need to do anything. You’re not at risk of losing more than you already have. The question is whether anything happens to change V1’s price — and as explained above, the realistic scenarios for that are extremely limited.
If you’re researching Lucky Block with fresh capital and considering a position: V2 is the token to research, not V1. V2 has the actual utility connection to the casino. Even V2 is an extremely small-cap, illiquid, high-risk asset — but at least it’s the one the project is actively building around.
The crypto gaming and GameFi sector continues evolving, with new platforms entering and established ones differentiating. Lucky Block’s focus on accessible iGaming mechanics, its BSC-to-Ethereum evolution, and its sports partnerships give it a credible identity in a crowded sector. Whether that identity translates to token price appreciation for V2 holders remains an open question — but it’s at least the right question to be asking.
For V1 specifically: treat any remaining position as a negligible speculative residual, not an active investment. The token you should be analysing if you care about Lucky Block’s future is V2.
These tables cover LBLOCK V1 scenarios alongside V2 for context. Neither token represents a reliable investment at any price.
LBLOCK V1 Scenarios (BSC legacy token):
| Year | Bear | Base | Moderate Bull | Bull |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 | $0.00000005 | $0.0000001–$0.0000002 | $0.000001 | $0.000005 |
| 2027 | $0.00000003 | $0.0000001 | $0.0000005 | $0.000002 |
| 2030 | Effectively zero | ~$0.0000001 | $0.000001 | $0.000010 |
LBLOCK V2 Scenarios (Ethereum active token):
| Year | Bear | Base | Moderate Bull | Bull |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 | $0.000003 | $0.000010–$0.000025 | $0.000050 | $0.0002 |
| 2027 | $0.000005 | $0.000015–$0.000040 | $0.0001 | $0.0005 |
| 2030 | $0.000005 | $0.0001 | $0.001 | $0.005 |

