- Ripple ex-CTO David Schwartz changed his X profile picture to the FUZZY memecoin avatar
- The move came weeks after Schwartz publicly called memecoin investing “distasteful”
- FUZZY is tied to the legendary Fuzzybear wallet deep inside XRP Ledger history
David Schwartz just accidentally reignited XRP Twitter by doing the one thing crypto communities never handle calmly: changing his profile picture. The Ripple ex-CTO switched his X avatar to the FUZZY meme coin bear, immediately triggering speculation after previously calling memecoin investing “distasteful” only weeks earlier.

And because this is XRP Twitter, people instantly treated the profile update like a Federal Reserve policy announcement.
FUZZY Is Already XRP Ledger Folklore
FUZZY is a meme token built on the XRP Ledger inspired by the legendary “Fuzzybear” wallet from 2013. The wallet became part of XRPL mythology after placing a joke offer proposing a trade of 1 XRP for 1 BTC back when Bitcoin was barely mainstream.
Over time, the story evolved into full community folklore, meaning anything connected to the Fuzzybear name tends to send certain XRP holders into detective mode almost immediately.
So when Schwartz opened a trust line for FUZZY earlier this month, people noticed.
The Profile Picture Changed Everything
Initially, Schwartz defended the trust line by saying it was purely technical and should not be viewed as an endorsement. On the XRP Ledger, adding trust lines is a fairly routine network action. That explanation mostly held up.

Then things got awkward. On May 18, Schwartz publicly stated that he finds “the idea that people think of a memecoin as an investment to be distasteful.” Fair enough.
Shortly afterward, he voluntarily changed his profile picture to the FUZZY bear. At that point, the “this is just technical” defense became a lot harder to maintain. Updating your avatar is not blockchain maintenance. That’s a conscious decision, and the internet reacted accordingly.
Schwartz Seems Aware of the Chaos
To his credit, Schwartz has consistently tried to avoid acting like a promotional shield for speculative tokens. He admitted publicly that he feels stuck between wanting to engage with the community while also avoiding accidental endorsements that could later backfire.
That’s a reasonable position. It just becomes much harder to communicate cleanly when your profile picture suddenly matches the memecoin everyone is speculating about.
And honestly, Schwartz probably knew exactly how the XRP community would react before he changed it.
At This Point, The Speculation Is the Product
Whether Schwartz actually supports FUZZY, finds the meme funny, or simply enjoys watching crypto Twitter spiral almost doesn’t matter anymore. The XRP community has always been exceptionally good at turning tiny signals into giant narratives.
A profile picture change from one of Ripple’s most recognizable figures was never going to pass quietly. In crypto, perception moves markets almost as fast as fundamentals sometimes.
And right now, XRP Twitter is very busy trying to decide whether a cartoon bear means something much bigger than a cartoon bear.











