A fresh controversy has emerged within the Shiba Inu ecosystem after a community figure alleged that the network’s recent surge in wallet addresses does not reflect genuine adoption.
The development follows a sharp increase in Shiba Inu’s holder count. Earlier this month, the figure also surpassed the 1.6 million milestone. Since July 4, $SHIB has added more than 75,000 wallet addresses, pushing the total number of holders to 1,675,551 (1.67 million).
At first glance, the rapid growth signals rising adoption. However, The Dark Shib argued that the increase stems from an automated distribution mechanism rather than new investors joining the ecosystem.
Analyst Questions $SHIB Holder Count Growth
According to The Dark Shib, the activity originates from TheShibBull, a verified smart contract created by decentralized exchange WoofSwap. The analyst claimed that the contract generates new wallet addresses and sends them small amounts of $SHIB, causing blockchain tracking platforms to recognize those addresses as token holders.
Specifically, Dark Shib alleged that the contract uses blockchain data, including block hashes, to generate random Ethereum addresses before distributing as little as 1 $SHIB to hundreds of wallets in each transaction.
As a result, the holder count increases even though the addresses do not belong to users who intentionally purchased $SHIB, actively participate in the ecosystem, or contribute to network activity.
The analyst stressed that wallet count alone does not accurately measure adoption. According to him, inactive wallets holding negligible amounts of $SHIB should not be treated as evidence of genuine community expansion.
Marketing Strategy?
The analyst also questioned the contract’s administrative features, claiming that its owner can modify the amount of $SHIB distributed and withdraw tokens held within the contract. Consequently, Dark Shib argued that the initiative cannot be viewed as a fully decentralized community effort.
Furthermore, the community member criticized WoofSwap for promoting $SHIB holder milestones while simultaneously drawing attention to its RYOSHI token. The analyst suggested that the rising holder count may have been used as a marketing strategy to increase visibility for the affiliated project.
WoofSwap Defends TheShibBull Initiative
WoofSwap rejected the allegations and defended TheShibBull as a lighthearted community initiative rather than an attempt to mislead investors.
In response, the DEX argued that although the contract sends 1 $SHIB to randomly generated wallets, anyone who eventually controls one of those addresses could discover the deposited tokens.
Moreover, WoofSwap said the initiative was intended to make the $SHIB community more enjoyable rather than contribute to ongoing disputes. The project encouraged developers to build creative experiences for $SHIB rather than criticizing existing initiatives, describing TheShibBull as a fun experiment designed to celebrate the ecosystem.
That's a pretty interesting take!
Faking holder addresses doesn't make the whole thing useless.
Those wallets are randomly generated anyway. If someone actually claims one, they'll open it and find 1 $SHIB waiting inside. Pretty fun, right?
We should do more stuff like this. It… https://t.co/JijrUgFbaP
— WOOF (@woofswap) July 6, 2026
Shiba Inu Holder Distribution Reveals Strong Whale Dominance
Meanwhile, Shiba Inu’s holder count increased by another 0.002% over the past 24 hours, reaching 1,675,551 addresses. Despite the expanding holder base, ownership remains concentrated among a relatively small number of large wallets.
Data from Etherscan shows that whales account for just 707 wallets, representing 0.04% of all holders, yet they control 94.52% of $SHIB’s market cap of $2.55 billion.
In comparison, sharks comprise 2,861 wallets (0.17%) and hold 1.77% of the market cap, while dolphins represent 29,833 addresses (1.78%) and control 1.89% of the token’s value.
Smaller investors make up the overwhelming majority of $SHIB holders. Fish wallets total 188,958 addresses (11.28%) and collectively control 1.35% of the market cap. Crabs account for 479,350 wallets (28.61%) and hold 0.41%.
Meanwhile, shrimp remains the largest holder category by wallet count. They comprise 973,906 addresses, representing 58.12% of all $SHIB holders, but collectively control just 0.05% of the token’s market capitalization.
Overall, the distribution highlights a significant gap between Shiba Inu’s expanding holder count and its ownership structure, as a small group of whale wallets continues to dominate the vast majority of the token’s market exposure.