Simulate a $10K Solana Token Launch with a 90/10 Split
A 90/10 split at $10K on Solana creates a $9,000 pool with just $1,000 for acquisition. Solana's low gas costs mean the full $1,000 acquisition converts to tokens without any friction cost, and the $9,000 pool is among the deeper micro-cap pools on Raydium. Solana's structurally lower MEV risk reduces the anti-sniper argument for 90/10, but the deep pool still benefits every participant by lowering slippage. The founder's $1,000 acquisition from a $9,000 pool (roughly 11% trade-to-pool ratio) results in a minimal supply ownership position. The simulation quantifies this ownership precisely.
Scenario Parameters
Solana
$10K
90/10
1,000,000,000
$9,000
$1,000
Key Concepts for This Scenario
Frequently Asked Questions
How does 90/10 on Solana at $10K compare to 90/10 on Ethereum at the same budget in practical terms?
The AMM math is identical — same liquidity, same slippage curves, same supply ownership result. The practical difference is that on Ethereum, the anti-sniper defence argument is much stronger due to active MEV bots. On Solana, the same 90/10 split creates an equally deep pool but the defensive value is lower. What stays constant is the liquidity benefit for retail participants: $9,000 of liquidity handles small trades well on both chains.
What is the founder slippage percentage on a $1,000 acquisition from a $9,000 Solana pool?
A $1,000 buy into a $9,000 pool is approximately 11% of liquidity. The constant product formula produces roughly 10% price impact at this ratio. The founder pays an effective price approximately 10% above the initial spot price for the average token in the buy. The simulator calculates the exact percentage and shows the tokens received alongside the equivalent spot-price token count, making the slippage cost visible.
Is a $9,000 Solana pool deep enough to appear in Jupiter aggregator routing?
Jupiter routes trades through pools based on available liquidity and price efficiency. A $9,000 pool is above the typical threshold for aggregator inclusion on Solana, though routing volume will go to deeper pools first. The simulator models the AMM dynamics of a $9,000 pool — whether Jupiter picks it up depends on the aggregator's current routing logic, which changes over time.
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