Pi Network is cleaning house fast. Following the removal of WorldBanksPi last week, a second major DApp has now been delisted from the Pi Browser ecosystem. Kawanua VIPi had accumulated over 21,000 staked Pi and carried high user ratings. It has been completely removed without warning. The Pi Core Team confirmed the delisting, and users searching for the app now encounter only an error screen. Pi Network news today makes one thing clear: popularity and user numbers offer zero protection if a project violates compliance standards.
The established pattern continues. The network removed WorldBanksPi for promoting a Global Consensus Value (GCV) of 310,000 USD per Pi. This figure lacks a basis in reality, and the project used it to lure users into staking and deposit schemes. Kawanua VIPi followed a similar playbook. It inflated valuations, speculative staking mechanics, and financial promises that crossed Pi’s clearly defined red lines.
Both removals happened without prior notice. Both projects had significant user bases. Neither received an appeals process. The Pi Core Team confirmed they will return staked Pi from Kawanua VIPi to users through the original channels once staking periods expire. It’s a detail that will matter to the thousands of Pioneers who participated.
The message from Pi’s leadership is being delivered through action, not announcements. Any project using GCV hype, Ponzi-style mechanics, or speculative financial schemes faces instant removal regardless of its size or ranking.
Into this environment steps Pi ELF, subtitled “Elf Continent,” developed by CiDi Games. The project positions itself as the exact type of development Pi’s ecosystem cleanup intends to foster. Developers describe the project as a digital realm that grows alongside Pioneers. They built the platform on full compliance and a long-term vision rather than short-term financial hype.
The Pi Core Team will reveal the full scope of Pi ELF at Beta launch. It offers no GCV promises, no staking-to-earn schemes, and no artificial valuations. This positioning alone separates it meaningfully from the projects currently being purged.
For Pi Network price 2026 watchers expecting an immediate price surge from the v23 upgrade, community analysts are urging patience. The upgrade roadmap moves from Testnet 1 through Testnet 2 to Mainnet in a phased approach. Node authority will gradually decentralize throughout 2026. The team will open-source the code in stages, with the goal of achieving full decentralization by year-end.
Furthermore, analysts argue that price appreciation follows infrastructure rather than the other way around. Consequently, the realistic timeline for meaningful price discovery involves top-tier exchange listings because genuine ecosystem activity emerges approximately six months after the team completes the open-sourcing process.
For Pi Network investors, this purge creates a healthier market. Specifically, scam projects suppress ecosystem credibility and pose a direct threat to long-term value. Indeed, every removal strengthens the foundation for legitimate applications like Pi ELF. For developers, the compliance bar now remains publicly visible and active. Consequently, developers must build real products for real users because the network removes everything else.
The post Pi Network Purges Fake Apps — But Is Pi ELF the Real Deal? appeared first on Coinfomania.

