export const prerender = true; Solana Token Launch — $10K Budget, 90/10 Split

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.

For educational and illustrative purposes only. Not financial or investment advice. Simulated results do not predict actual market outcomes.

Scenario Parameters

Chain

Solana

TGE Capital

$10K

Liquidity Split

90/10

Total Supply

1,000,000,000

Liquidity (L)

$9,000

Acquisition (P)

$1,000

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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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