I just tried it on my mobile phone with google.com and "blockchain" as search item.
(Of course, I didn't expect to see the phishing site anymore, but who knows.)I thought, maybe on a mobile the actual address of search hits isn't displayed, but this is not the case as I remembered. Search results are displayed with icon, a title, a small URL text below the title and below that a larger clickable/tappable blue Link text which should send you to the shown (tiny text) URL, and more description below that large link.
OP, didn't you pay attention to the small URL destination and just tapped quickly (and blindly) the top, usually sponsored, search hit?
If yes, and from what you wrote, it seems so, well, this is somewhat a reckless action. I would recommend to always have a look at the actual URL of search hits. The phishing domain looks similar to what you're used to, but with crypto coin stuff URLs additional caution is highly recommended.
If something looks vaguely odd or suspicious, don't click, don't tap. Take the extra seconds to carefully check. If in doubt, use a second search engine like
DuckDuckGo and cross-check search results.
Set and use bookmarks, check them regularly. Verify links and their destination URL. This is very basic internet browsing safety 101. There's more to browsing safety, obviously, which goes beyond this topic.