Ever feel like the crypto space moves faster than a caffeinated squirrel on Solana? One tweet from @StarPlatinumSOL just laid bare the absurdly lucrative (and kinda shady) hustle of meme token creation on Pump.fun. If you're new to this, Pump.fun is that wild Solana-based platform where anyone can spin up a meme coin in seconds—think fair launches with built-in bonding curves that reward early creators big time. But this post? It's a satirical gut-punch highlighting how devs are turning real-world tragedies into token jackpots.
The tweet drops a step-by-step "guide" that's equal parts eye-roll and eye-opener:
- Create an account on Pump Fun – Easy peasy, just connect your Solana wallet and you're in.
- Start launching tokens (up to 500) – Pump.fun lets you pump out coins like candy, no coding required.
- Wait for something terrible to happen, like the Charlie Kirk incident – Oof. For context, Charlie Kirk, the fiery conservative commentator, was at a Utah university event on September 10 when shots rang out. Terrifying footage shows chaos, a rooftop shooter, and the FBI scrambling with surveillance vids. It's the kind of headline that screams "meme potential" in the darkest corners of crypto Twitter.
- Run to your computer and launch a token about it – Speed is king here. The faster you capitalize on the buzz, the higher the initial hype.
- Sell part of your tokens (the dev made over $140,000) – Devs get a slice of the supply upfront. Dump strategically as the curve climbs.
- Claim your $400,000 creator fees – This is the real goldmine. Pump.fun charges fees on trades, and creators snag a cut—over time, that adds up to life-changing SOL.
- Repeat – Rinse, lather, profit... until the rug pulls or regulators knock.
That attached screenshot? It's the smoking gun: a dev's dashboard boasting $397.54K in USD equivalent and a whopping 1,670 SOL in creator rewards. That's not chump change—it's high six figures from exploiting the tragedy's virality. The tweet's gone viral itself, racking up 264 likes, 165 replies, and over 13K views in hours. Folks are bookmarking it like it's a secret playbook, which says a lot about our corner of the blockchain world.
But let's break it down for the uninitiated. Pump.fun's model is genius in its simplicity: Tokens start cheap and "pump" as buyers pile in, following a bonding curve that auto-adjusts price. Hit a certain market cap? It migrates to Raydium, Solana's DEX, for liquidity. Creators earn from deployment fees and a share of trading volume—passive income on steroids. In this case, the Charlie Kirk token (likely something edgy like $KIRKSHOT or whatever twisted name) rode the wave of outrage and curiosity straight to the moon.
Of course, it's not all sunshine and SOL. This strategy dances on the edge of ethics—who profits off a shooting? And practically, most launches flop harder than a bad NFT drop. Timing is everything; miss the news cycle, and your token's DOA. Plus, with up to 500 launches per account, it's a volume game—spray and pray until one hits.
If you're a blockchain practitioner dipping toes into memes, this is a stark reminder: Innovation meets opportunism in crypto. Tools like Pump.fun democratize token creation, but they also amplify the absurd. Want to level up? Study the Solana ecosystem—it's where memes meet millions. Just maybe skip the tragedy angle.
What do you think—genius hack or crypto's dark side? Drop your takes below, and keep an eye on Meme Insider for more breakdowns on the tokens shaking up the charts.