coined.fun

How Coined.fun Works

A full walkthrough of how memes get submitted, funded, launched, and how everyone — contributors, creators, and the platform — gets their share. Everything described here is enforced by smart contracts on BNB Chain, not by us manually.

The lifecycle of a meme

01

Submit a meme

Anyone can submit a meme idea: a name, ticker, image, description, and category. You pick one of three funding tiers (Micro, Standard, or Growth) and pay a $5 submission fee. Duplicate names or tickers are blocked automatically — only one meme can ever use a given name or ticker.

02

Contributors fund it

Anyone can contribute $2.50 to back a meme they like, capped at one contribution per wallet — there's no way to buy multiple shares or get a bigger allocation by paying more. Every contributor ends up with exactly the same stake.

03

Target reached → auto-launch

The moment a meme's contributor target is hit, it's marked ready to launch. An automated process checks every minute and triggers the launch — no one (not the creator, not the platform) approves or initiates this manually. Within that one-minute window, the token deploys, gets distributed, and a PancakeSwap liquidity pool is created automatically.

04

Liquidity burned, forever

In that same automatic step, the liquidity pool tokens are sent directly to a dead address — a wallet nobody controls or can ever access. This happens before anyone, including the platform, could possibly intervene. There's no admin key, no pause button, and no way to undo it.

05

Didn't reach target in time?

Each tier has a funding deadline (Micro: 7 days, Standard: 14 days, Growth: 30 days). If a meme doesn't reach its target before the deadline, it's automatically cancelled by the same hourly automated check. Contributors can then claim a refund of their $2.00 escrow portion from their dashboard.

Where the 1,000,000,000 tokens go

Liquidity pool
Paired with all contributed BNB, then LP tokens burned forever
80%
Contributor pool
Split evenly across every contributor — claim from your dashboard
11%
Treasury
Platform's share, sent immediately on launch
2%
Creator (immediate)
Sent to the creator's wallet immediately on launch
3.5%
Creator (vested)
Released to the creator after a 30-day vesting period
3.5%

Frequently asked questions

Can the creator or platform pull the liquidity later?

No. LP tokens are sent to a dead address the moment the pool is created — nobody holds them, including us. There is no mechanism in the smart contract that could ever move them again.

Can more tokens be minted later, diluting holders?

No. Total supply is fixed at 1,000,000,000 tokens at creation. The token contract has no mint function at all — not a restricted one, not an admin-only one. It simply doesn't exist in the code.

What exactly am I paying when I contribute $2.50?

$2.00 goes into escrow and counts toward the meme's funding target — this portion is refundable if the meme doesn't launch. $0.50 is an instant platform fee and is non-refundable in all cases.

What if I contribute and the meme never launches?

If the deadline passes without hitting the target, the meme is automatically cancelled and you can claim back your $2.00 escrow portion from your dashboard. The $0.50 platform fee is not refunded.

How do I actually receive my tokens after launch?

Visit your dashboard and use the Claims tab. Contributors claim their share of the contributor pool; creators claim their immediate allocation right away and their vested allocation after the 30-day vesting period ends.

Is the contributor list / progress shown accurate?

The percentage funded and contributor count are read directly from the blockchain, not just our database — so what you see reflects the actual on-chain state, not something that could be faked by us or anyone else.

Has this been audited by a third party?

Not yet. The contracts have been tested extensively on testnet, but a professional third-party audit has not been performed. See our Risk Disclosure page for the full picture before contributing.

For the full legal terms, see our Terms of Service. For the risks involved in contributing, see our Risk Disclosure.