Rekt

Rekt is a piece of crypto slang (derived from the gaming term “wrecked”) that describes catastrophic financial loss — being devastated by a trade, investment, or market event. The term originated in online gaming culture (“you got rekt, son”) and was adopted wholesale by crypto trading communities via Reddit, Telegram, and Crypto Twitter. Getting rekt implies not just losing money but losing it in a spectacular, often avoidable, usually leveraged way. It’s used both as a serious descriptor and sarcastically/lightheartedly depending on context.


Origins

  • Gaming origin: “Rekt” (intentional misspelling of “wrecked”) was internet gaming slang for getting completely dominated in a match — humiliated, demolished
  • 4chan/Reddit adoption: The term migrated through internet culture into crypto forums circa 2013–2015 as Bitcoin traders began using gaming terminology for trading outcomes
  • BitMEX culture: The leveraged derivatives platform BitMEX (launched 2014) popularized “rekt” in crypto trading communities as high-leverage liquidations became a daily occurrence. BitMEX’s “rekt” notifications (showing liquidated positions) were a cultural fixture

Common Usage

In a sentence:

  • “I went 20x long on ETH and got rekt when the candle dropped 15%”
  • “Whole portfolio rekt after the LUNA collapse”
  • “Did you see what happened to that 3AC position? Absolutely rekt”

Rekt.news / rekt.capital: The term spawned dedicated sites:

  • rekt.news — a site documenting DeFi hacks and protocol exploits with stylistic writing
  • rekt.capital — a crypto technical analysis brand/newsletter (different from rekt.news)

Types of Getting Rekt

Scenario How Rekt Happens
Leveraged liquidation Long 20x, price drops 5% → liquidated, entire position gone
Rug pull victim Buy token, devs drain liquidity pool, price → $0
Hack victim Protocol hacked, funds drained from wallet or pool
Holding through a bear Buy at ATH, hold through 90% drawdown
Short squeeze Short a coin, it moons, forced to cover at huge loss
FOMO trade Ape into a pump top, catch the dump

Related Slang Terms

Term Meaning
Rekt Catastrophic loss
NGMI “Not gonna make it” — pessimistic/dismissive, used when someone makes a bad decision
Bagholder Someone stuck holding a coin that has crashed
Paper hands Sold too early, caved under pressure
Diamond hands Held through extreme volatility without selling
Aping in Buying recklessly without research (often precedes getting rekt)
Degen Degenerate — someone who takes extreme trading risks
Liquidated Position force-closed by exchange due to insufficient margin

Cultural Significance

“Rekt” captures something important about crypto culture’s relationship with risk:

  • High-risk/high-reward behavior is normalized and even celebrated (“degen” is often worn as a badge)
  • Getting rekt is widely documented and shared — there are Twitter accounts, Discord channels, and websites dedicated to tracking rekt trades
  • The term functions as both a warning (“don’t get rekt”) and a post-mortem description
  • During major market events (FTX collapse, LUNA implosion), “everyone’s rekt” became a communal expression of shared loss

Social Media Sentiment

Rekt as both slang and content category is more prevalent than ever in 2026. Rekt.news’s long-form hack post-mortems attract wide CT readership after every major exploit. The word ‘rekt’ appears in tens of thousands of daily crypto tweets during volatile markets. High-leverage liquidation screenshots are a popular CT content format — shared as both warnings and dark humor about degen behavior.


Last updated: 2026-04

Related Terms


Sources

  1. Ante, L. (2021). “Cryptocurrency Hype and its Impact on Market Manipulation and Investor Behavior.” Journal of Alternative Investments, 24(2).
  1. Fang, F. et al. (2022). “Cryptocurrency Trading: A Comprehensive Survey.” Financial Innovation, 8(1).
  1. BitMEX Research (2018–2021). “Insurance Fund Reports and Liquidation Statistics.” BitMEX Blog.
  1. Chen, W. et al. (2020). “Detecting Ponzi Schemes on Ethereum: Towards Healthier Blockchain Technology.” Proceedings of the Web Conference 2018.
  1. Subramaniam, S. & Chakraborty, M. (2020). “Sentiment Analysis of Cryptocurrencies: A Case Study on Behavioral Impulses.” Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Finance, 32.