Logan Paul’s CryptoZoo lawsuit officially dismissed

https://www.dexerto.com/youtube/logan-pauls-cryptozoo-lawsuit-officially-dismissed-3277647/

Brad Norton Oct 31, 2025 · 2 mins read
Logan Paul’s CryptoZoo lawsuit officially dismissed
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After a two-year journey in the courts, a class action lawsuit leveled against Logan Paul for his involvement in the CryptoZoo project has now been dismissed over a lack of evidence.

Back in August, 2021, Paul revealed his own cryptocurrency-driven project known as CryptoZoo. The idea was essentially for NFTs of animals to be ‘captured’ and eventually traded, similar to Pokemon, another obsession of his.

Before long, said NFTs came into question for ripping off Adobe Stock Images. One year on, early investors were labelling the project a “scam’ as the ‘game’ side never got off the ground. As such, a class action lawsuit was filed against the influencer in 2023.

At the time, Paul pledged to refund those impacted with $1.8 million of his own money. However, that didn’t deter the legal action. Now, two years on, the case has officially been dismissed, with Paul’s name cleared as a result.

Logan Paul’s CryptoZoo lawsuit dismissed after two years

On October 30, 2025, TMZ reported the case has indeed been dismissed. This comes directly from Paul’s attorney, Jeff Neiman, who told TMZ of the decision.

“The district judge reaffirmed [the] ruling, holding once again that no reasonable juror could find Logan’s statements misleading or fraudulent.”

The case was therefore dismissed on a lack of evidence to support Paul’s comments surrounding the CryptoZoo project as “misleading or fraudulent.”

Allegedly, the YouTuber-turned-WWE-Superstar got the news back in August, on his wedding day, in fact. Neiman claimed the judge delivered them the best gift of all, declaring a “total dismissal” of the lawsuit.

CryptoZoo was embroiled in controversy from the very beginning, though it reached its peak when fellow YouTuber Coffezilla dove deep on the subject.

According to his findings at the time, ‘victims’ of the project were still not paid out from Paul’s $1.8M refund pledge six months after the fact.

This served as the catalyst for another heated back-and-forth, with Paul even filing his own lawsuit against Coffezilla for his coverage of the alleged “scam.”