But is it not possible that we could have old tokens lying around and are not always keeping up-to-date? If I remember correctly, ETH gas fees were sky high then and there was no deadline for swap, so I did not rush to swap. In fact, if they did not want to support, they should not provide price quotes in Trezor Exchange instead of showing quotes and then refusing to swap nor refund them after I sent the tokens? I was accepting a big haircut off market value for the quoted swap precisely because I thought they were old tokens.
If the tokens are indeed without value as they claim, why not send them back instead of keeping them and saying they have no value? They are in fact still swappable via wallet.loomx.io/token-swap , I just swapped a few more yesterday.
Here is the huge problem. Godex might be working with partners for liquidity like Binance, so when you sent the tokens to their address. Of course, they might have tried to send them over to Binance (which probably no longer supports the old tokens) for exchange of which they found out that the tokens were invalid. From what I know, once you send a wrong token to an exchange, getting a refund is almost impossible for security purposes of other people's funds.
If you have some doubts, try to send a few old tokens to Binance and see if they will credit your account. I am very sure you will lose the funds and receive nothing.
I see on my Binance mobile app, LOOMOLD (old loom network) is suspended.