Simulate a $5K Solana Token Launch with an 80/20 Split
At $5K on Solana, the 80/20 split pushes $4,000 into the pool — the deepest configuration available at this budget — and leaves just $1,000 for token acquisition. This conservative approach makes sense for teams testing a token concept: the deeper pool produces less volatile price action, making early trading patterns easier to analyze. With Solana transaction costs measured in fractions of a cent, even the $1,000 acquisition budget can be deployed across multiple smaller buys without gas eating into the position.
Scenario Parameters
Solana
$5K
80/20
1,000,000,000
$4,000
$1,000
Key Concepts for This Scenario
Frequently Asked Questions
With only $1,000 for acquisition on Solana, is an 80/20 split worth it at $5K?
The 80/20 split at $5K is a stability-first strategy. The $4,000 pool absorbs small trades better than the $3,500 alternative, and the $1,000 acquisition buys tokens with less self-inflicted slippage (25% trade-to-pool ratio vs 43% at 70/30). The simulator quantifies whether the stability gain justifies the smaller position.
How many SOL does the $4,000 pool hold at SOL = $150?
At $150 per SOL, the pool holds approximately 26.7 SOL on the native token side. The simulator displays pool composition in both USD and SOL terms. On Solana, the native token depth matters because most DEX interfaces display prices in SOL rather than USD.
Can a $5K, 80/20 Solana pool sustain 24 hours of trading?
The constant product formula ensures the pool never fully drains. However, with only $4,000 of depth, sustained sell pressure can drive the price down dramatically. The simulator runs a configurable number of random trades to model what 24 hours of activity might look like — the key metric is whether the final price remains in a viable range.
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