export const prerender = true; Ethereum Token Launch — $25K Budget, 90/10 Split

Simulate a $25K Ethereum Token Launch with a 90/10 Split

At $25K on Ethereum with a 90/10 split, $22,500 goes to pool liquidity and $2,500 to token acquisition — the most pool-heavy configuration at this budget. The deeper pool directly reduces sniper profitability on Ethereum mainnet: when bots sell into a $22,500 pool rather than a $20,000 pool, their sells cause slightly less price impact, compressing the gap between their entry and exit. The $2,500 acquisition carries roughly 11% trade-to-pool ratio, resulting in moderate founder slippage and a modest ownership position. The simulator makes the tradeoff concrete: compare this 90/10 result against the 80/20 and 70/30 scenarios to see exactly what each extra dollar of liquidity costs in ownership terms.

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

$25K

Liquidity Split

90/10

Total Supply

1,000,000,000

Liquidity (L)

$22,500

Acquisition (P)

$2,500

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Key Concepts for This Scenario

Frequently Asked Questions

How does 90/10 at $25K on Ethereum compare to 80/20 at the same budget?

The 90/10 split adds $2,500 more to the pool ($22,500 vs $20,000) and removes $2,500 from acquisition ($2,500 vs $5,000). The pool is 12.5% deeper, which reduces slippage for all trades including sniper sells. But the acquisition budget is halved, so founder ownership drops substantially. The simulator lets you run both scenarios and see the exact difference in liquidity, slippage curves, and supply ownership percentage.

What supply ownership does $2,500 acquire from a $22,500 Ethereum pool?

A $2,500 buy into a $22,500 pool is approximately 11% of liquidity, producing moderate price impact. The simulator calculates the exact token output using the constant product formula and divides by total supply to show the ownership percentage. At this split, expect a low ownership figure — this configuration is designed for liquidity, not accumulation.

Is $25K at 90/10 suitable for a community-first Ethereum token launch?

It signals community-first intent clearly: the founder starts with minimal supply (roughly 11% trade into a deep pool) and most of the float is available for organic participants. The risk is that a $22,500 pool, while deep for a new launch, is still thin enough that retail-sized trades move the price noticeably. Use the simulator to check whether $22,500 of liquidity meets your expected trade size profile.

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