The evidence strongly supports the truthfulness of the statement. Two highly authoritative sources, the English and Korean versions of CoinMarketCap, confirm that the SENT token (rebranded as ChainBounty) is listed on the Upbit exchange. The Korean-language CoinMarketCap page specifically supports the existence of the KRW market by showing trading volume in Korean Won (₩).Furthermore, two independent, though lower-authority, sources directly corroborate the full details of the statement. A post on X (Twitter) and a Telegram channel post both contain the text of a listing announcement in Korean, which specifies that Upbit would support trading for SENT on its KRW, BTC, and USDT markets. The consistency between these two sources, despite their lower authority, adds significant weight to their claims.The single piece of contradictory evidence from CoinNess is weak. It appears confused, incorrectly stating that Upbit listed a different token and that SENT was listed on another exchange. Given its low relevance and apparent inaccuracy, it does little to undermine the consistent body of supporting evidence. The remaining sources are irrelevant. In summary, high-authority sources confirm the core of the statement (listing on Upbit and the KRW market), and two consistent, lower-authority sources confirm the specific details about the BTC and USDT markets, making the overall statement highly likely to be true.