How do I change my token's logo or information on CenturionDEX?#
Token names, symbols, decimals, and logos shown by CenturionDEX can come from onchain contract data, verified token records, and interface indexing. You cannot safely change another contract's identity from your wallet, and an interface update does not alter the token contract itself.
Before requesting an update#
Confirm that you represent the token project and that the token is deployed on Centurion. Prepare current, verifiable information:
- The full Centurion token contract address.
- The token standard, normally CRC-20 for a fungible token.
- Onchain name, symbol, and decimals.
- The project's official website and documentation reached through verifiable channels.
- The logo and metadata in the format required by the current official submission process.
- Evidence of authority to request the change.
Do not submit a token from another network merely because it has the same name or address format.
Step-by-step for token teams#
- Verify the contract through the current official Centurion explorer or contract-verification process.
- Confirm that onchain metadata is correct and that any proxy or upgrade controls are disclosed.
- Reach the CenturionDEX metadata or support process through a current official Centurion source.
- Follow the current submission requirements for contract details, project verification, and media files.
- Respond to verification requests only through the same confirmed official channel.
- Allow indexing and cache updates to propagate after an accepted change.
- Recheck the displayed contract address, symbol, decimals, and logo before announcing completion.
Submission does not guarantee inclusion, ranking, a warning-free status, or endorsement. CenturionDEX may decline or remove metadata that is misleading, unverifiable, unsafe, or technically incompatible.
For users who see missing information#
A missing logo does not mean the token is absent from your address. Verify ownership onchain using the correct Centurion contract. A compatible wallet may let you import the contract locally for display.
Importing a token changes only the wallet's presentation. It does not verify safety, create liquidity, or make the token tradable. Never copy a contract from a stranger just to make a balance appear.
Common issues#
- Wrong symbol or decimals: compare interface data with the verified contract.
- Old logo remains: browser, wallet, or indexer caches may update at different times.
- Duplicate tokens appear: identify each by full contract address.
- A project changed its branding: update requests still require contract and authority verification.
- A fake support agent offers expedited listing: use only the official process and do not pay an unsolicited address.
Stay safe#
A metadata request never requires a recovery phrase, private key, wallet password, or broad token approval. Review every signature and verify the support channel independently.