GTech Network just dropped a real number: 9 billion GTC tokens, burned for good, sent to the official BSC dead address. That single move cut total supply from 10 billion down to 1 billion GTC, and it answers part of the question everyone keeps asking about the GTech Network listing.
The project wants to clear up confusion spreading through the community right now. The GTech Network update makes one thing clear: this burn is real and verifiable, and it has nothing to do with TGE timing itself.
Anyone can verify this directly on BscScan using the official GTC contract address: 0xd1F6cc234b9B82E90AC277c9C2E3C7a91d17DAf9. The tokens went to the standard burn wallet, 0x000000000000000000000000000000000000dEaD, which removed them from circulation permanently.
Here's how the current GTC supply breaks down:
Total supply: 1 billion GTC
Distributed to users: approximately 204 million GTC across 6,200+ users
Remaining in the company wallet: approximately 796 million GTC
That 796 million sitting in the company wallet is not staying there either. The team confirmed it will get burned too, at the time of listing, which means actual circulating supply could end up far smaller than 1 billion once trading starts.
Here's where the dates start telling a story. The GTech Network presale end and TGE both closed officially on May 30, 2026, with presale pricing locked near $0.002.
May 30 was also the original GTech Network launch target, tied to Phase 4 of the roadmap. That date passed with no listing. A second window opened around June 15, and that one passed too, again with no listing.
So the pattern so far looks like this: two missed windows in 16 days, then a quiet stretch through late June with no new date, followed now by a major supply update instead of a launch. That sequence suggests the team is handling internal pieces, like this burn, before setting a third target.
Based on the gap between the first two missed windows (roughly two weeks) and the larger move just made, a next attempt landing in late Q3 2026, around Aug–Sept, fits the pace the project has shown so far.
That is a read based on the timeline given, not an official date.
The team has pointed to weak market conditions as the main reason, citing Bitcoin volatility and a low Fear & Greed Index. A June 7 post framed the wait as protecting holders from a weak debut, comparing current GTC holders to early Bitcoin buyers who waited out rough patches.
That reasoning lines up with the burn news. Cutting supply from 10 billion to 1 billion, with more burns promised at listing, is the kind of move a project makes when trying to set up a stronger price floor before trading opens, not after.
Three exchange partners are confirmed for a simultaneous launch: BingX, LBank, and Binance Alpha through the Binance Web3 Wallet.
GTC carries a 0% buy and sell tax on its contract, but it isn't tradable yet on trackers like CoinGecko or any centralized exchange.
For mined tokens, the project has set a vesting schedule: 40% unlocks at TGE or listing, another 40% unlocks after 6 months, and the final 20% unlocks after 10 months.
That schedule is built to stop a flood of tokens hitting the market the moment trading opens, which generally leads to the price crash.
The GTech Network presale end and the heavy token burn both point to a project getting ready for its next phase. What's left is the listing date itself, and based on how the last two windows played out, the next real signal will likely come as a specific date announcement rather than another delay explanation.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Crypto markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making any investment decisions.


