- Binance will list MUBARAK, BROCCOLI714, TUT, and BANANAS31 on March 27 after a community vote.
- Over 172,000 verified votes helped determine the listings, with strict filtering to remove invalid activity.
- Trading pairs include USDT and USDC options, with zero listing fees and withdrawals opening March 28.
It’s official—Binance is giving the green light to four community-voted tokens, all of which sound like they were dreamed up during a meme-fueled group chat at 3 a.m. But hey, the people have spoken.
Starting March 27 at 21:00 UTC, trading goes live for MUBARAK, CZ’s Dog (aka BROCCOLI714), Tutorial (TUT), and the hilariously-named Banana For Scale (BANANAS31). These were originally floating around on Binance Alpha, but now they’re making the jump to the real spot trading floor.
New Spot Trading Pairs Going Live
Here’s what’s launching:
- MUBARAK/USDT, MUBARAK/USDC
- BROCCOLI714/USDT, BROCCOLI714/USDC
- TUT/USDT, TUT/USDC
- BANANAS31/USDT, BANANAS31/USDC
Deposits? Open now.
Trading? Kicks off one hour after listing.
Withdrawals? That opens up March 28 at 21:00 UTC.
Listing fee? Zero BNB.
Smart Contracts, If You’re Into That Stuff
All tokens live on BNB Smart Chain:
- MUBARAK:
0x5c85d6c6825ab4032337f11ee92a72df936b46f6
- BROCCOLI714:
0x6d5AD1592ed9D6D1dF9b93c793AB759573Ed6714
- TUT:
0xCAAE2A2F939F51d97CdFa9A86e79e3F085b799f3
- BANANAS31:
0x3d4f0513e8a29669b960f9dbca61861548a9a760
Why These Tokens? Here’s What Went Down
Binance looked at everything from trading demand to community support, and yeah, they filtered out all the bots and weird stuff before counting the votes. After cleaning up the data, they landed on four picks. The rest? Still under review. Could show up in the next round.
Out of 185,432 votes, about 12,459 were tossed out due to vote manipulation—fake accounts, shady scripts, you know the drill. That left 172,973 verified votes.
To actually count, users had to hold at least 0.01 BNB during the voting window. Two vote validation methods were used just to double-check everything.
And yes, BANANAS31 was up there in terms of engagement. Out of 36,000 raw votes for it, just under 8,000 were fully eligible under Method 1.

Final Thoughts: Chaos, But Kind of Fun
Let’s be honest—this whole thing reads more like a crypto variety show than a financial institution listing, but that’s kind of what makes it great. Memecoins and wild names aside, Binance is clearly leaning into community-driven momentum while still keeping a leash on the nonsense.
It’s weird. It’s chaotic. It’s crypto.