export const prerender = true; Ethereum Token Launch — $100K Budget, 90/10 Split

Simulate a $100K Ethereum Token Launch with a 90/10 Split

At $100K with a 90/10 split, $90,000 goes to Ethereum pool liquidity, placing this among the deepest new token pools modeled in this simulator. Only $10,000 funds token acquisition, a deliberate choice for teams where pool credibility and sniper resistance matter more than founder accumulation on Ethereum mainnet. A $90,000 pool absorbs large trades with low slippage and attracts DEX aggregator routing, signaling serious capital commitment to the market. The simulator shows exactly what $10,000 buys from this deep pool and whether a 90/10 split at $100K is the right call for your launch strategy.

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

Scenario Parameters

Chain

Ethereum

TGE Capital

$100K

Liquidity Split

90/10

Total Supply

1,000,000,000

Liquidity (L)

$90,000

Acquisition (P)

$10,000

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Key Concepts for This Scenario

Frequently Asked Questions

How much ETH is in a $90,000 Ethereum pool at the standard $3,500 rate?

At $3,500 per ETH, a $90,000 USD pool holds approximately 25.7 ETH on the native token side. The simulator displays pool composition in both USD and ETH terms. This ETH depth determines how the pool interacts with aggregator routing and how it is perceived by institutional participants who evaluate liquidity in native token terms.

At $100K and 90/10, what is the post-TGE supply ownership from the $10,000 acquisition?

A $10,000 buy into a $90,000 pool is roughly 11% of liquidity, producing moderate price impact. The simulator calculates the exact token output and supply ownership percentage. Compared to the 80/20 split where $20,000 buys from an $80,000 pool (same 25% ratio), the 90/10 acquisition buys fewer tokens at a lower average price per token. The results panel shows both figures for direct comparison.

Is 90/10 at $100K on Ethereum better than 80/20 at $50K for pool resilience?

The $90,000 pool (100K at 90/10) is deeper than the $40,000 pool (50K at 80/20) in absolute terms. A $5,000 sell represents 5.5% of the $90K pool versus 12.5% of the $40K pool — substantially less price impact in the larger pool. However, the 80/20 at $50K acquires twice the token count per dollar invested. Run both scenarios in the simulator and compare the slippage tables and ownership figures to decide which profile fits your goals.

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