TON Rebrands Native Token to Gram, Reviving Telegram’s Original 2019 Crypto Name

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A token name that never launched is finally getting its moment. The TON ecosystem is rebranding its native asset as Gram, a label that Telegram founder Pavel Durov had originally attached to the project before a 2019 SEC enforcement action scrapped those plans. The blockchain network itself, The Open Network (TON), will keep its current name—only the token is changing, according to the original report .

The transition is scheduled to roll out over three weeks. Wallets, infrastructure providers, and ecosystem applications will gradually update the token name from TON to Gram. Exchanges and market data platforms may face a lag as they adapt their interfaces, though no network-level alterations are required.

The cosmetic shift lands at a time when the token has been showing strength. TON recently topped weekly gainers charts , reflecting renewed interest in the ecosystem. While the rebrand does not alter tokenomics or on-chain mechanics, it could sharpen retail recognition by linking the asset more explicitly to Telegram’s 900-million-user network—even though the messenger has distanced itself from the token since the SEC settlement.

Why Grams Now? A Nod to the 2019 Blueprint

Before TON became a community-run blockchain, it was Telegram’s ambitious Web3 layer. The original token, Gram, was meant to power payments inside the messaging app. Regulators halted that vision, forcing Telegram to return $1.2 billion to investors and abandon the project. The network was later revived by independent developers under the name The Open Network, with a native token that simply adopted the TON ticker.

Circling back to “Gram” is more than nostalgia. It signals a desire to reconnect with the project’s original brand equity without reopening old legal wounds. The ecosystem has grown considerably under the TON banner, supporting DeFi protocols, NFTs, and gaming applications. Adding the Gram name layers in a consumer-facing narrative that Telegram users may recognize instantly.

What Changes for Users and Infrastructure

For everyday token holders, the rename is largely cosmetic. Balances and transaction histories remain unaffected. The underlying asset is identical; only the display name in wallets and explorers will shift. The risk is confusion. With the network still called TON and the token now Gram, new users will encounter two different labels for what was once a uniform brand. Exchanges listing the asset may choose to update tickers or leave the TON symbol in place while displaying the full name as “Gram (TON).” The decision will vary by platform, and market participants should expect a messy rollout window.

Developer tooling does not change either. Smart contracts reference the chain identifier, not the token name. Still, any ecosystem with over 700 dApps benefits from clear nomenclature. The three-week timeframe gives integrators room to update UI elements, but the window is tight for exchanges with slower compliance review cycles.

The Regulatory Reckoning That Shaped the Rebrand

The rebranding arrives as Washington scrambles to finalize digital asset legislation, with the biggest US crypto bill heading for a Senate vote . For a project that previously settled with the SEC over unregistered securities claims, the regulatory climate still matters. Though TON now operates as a decentralized network, its deep ties to Telegram keep it under a microscope whenever enforcement rhetoric heats up. A name change does nothing to alter that reality, but it may help the token stand apart from the specific legal entity that the SEC once pursued.

What remains uncertain is how exchanges in jurisdictions with strict token listing requirements will treat the rename. While no new coin is being created, branding shifts can trigger internal reviews, potentially disrupting trading pairs during the transition. Liquidity providers and market makers operating on TON-native DEXs should watch for any temporary mismatches in asset labeling across aggregators.

The rollout itself will be an operational test. Wallets that fail to update promptly could show inconsistent names, creating support headaches. Yet if executed smoothly, the Gram rebrand could sharpen TON’s identity in a market that still confuses the blockchain with its defunct corporate predecessor. The next three weeks will show whether the market embraces the old name—or whether it merely adds one more label to an already complicated story.

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