Simulate a $25K Solana Token Launch with a 70/30 Split
The $25K balanced launch on Solana is a workhorse scenario. With $17,500 in the pool, the pair achieves solid depth for the Solana ecosystem — enough to handle the rapid small trades that characterize Raydium and Jupiter trading. The $7,500 acquisition budget captures a meaningful token position without the extreme price impact of the 60/40 split. In an ecosystem where new launches appear hourly, this level of liquidity helps the token stand out as a credible pair rather than a throwaway experiment.
Scenario Parameters
Solana
$25K
70/30
1,000,000,000
$17,500
$7,500
Key Concepts for This Scenario
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the optimal trade size for participants in a $17,500 Solana pool?
The simulator generates a slippage table showing price impact at every trade size. As a rule of thumb, trades under 2% of liquidity ($350) produce less than 2% slippage — this is the sweet spot for participants in a $17,500 pool. Larger trades should be split, which Solana gas costs make practical.
How many SOL does the $17,500 pool hold at SOL = $150?
At $150 per SOL, the native side of the pool holds approximately 116.7 SOL. The simulator displays the exact pool composition. This SOL depth matters because Solana traders primarily think in SOL terms — a pool holding over 100 SOL is perceived as meaningfully liquid on Raydium.
How does the $7,500 acquisition perform at 70/30 versus 60/40 on Solana at $25K?
At 70/30, the $7,500 buy is against a $17,500 pool (43% ratio). At 60/40, $10,000 buys against a $15,000 pool (66% ratio). The 70/30 acquisition buys fewer total dollars of tokens but at a significantly better effective price per token. The simulator shows exact token counts and average prices for both configurations.
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