Imagine reading about a place where crypto degeneracy thrives, scams are performance art, and every token launch is a gamble — this is exactly what our Pumpfun review is about.
Pump.fun is what happens when you mix low-effort crypto tools with high-effort internet chaos. Built on Solana, it lets anyone launch a token in minutes — no code, no shame, no brakes.
On the surface, it’s a meme coin launchpad with slick design and dirt-cheap fees. Underneath? A playground for rugpulls, fake hype, and tokens so outrageous they’d make 4chan blush.
It’s fast. It’s unfiltered. And it’s where performance art meets financial malpractice — all wrapped in the illusion of decentralization and free markets.
Let’s dive in.
Pump.fun is a platform that lets anyone create and launch a meme coin on the Solana blockchain instantly, without needing to write code or understand how tokens work. You pick a name, slap on a ticker, and boom: your coin is live.
Here’s the basic idea. When you launch a token, Pump.fun automatically creates a trading pool for it using Solana’s decentralized exchange infrastructure. The system locks the initial liquidity, meaning the first bit of money can’t be pulled out by the creator, and the token becomes tradable. Buyers rush in, hoping to catch a pump. If the price goes up, early holders win. If it tanks, well… welcome to Pump.fun.
The platform presents itself as a safe, democratic launchpad for viral tokens. Liquidity is “locked,” bots are supposedly controlled, and it all feels like a low-stakes meme casino. But here’s the twist: just because something is permissionless doesn’t mean it’s safe or fair.
The result is a system that looks legit, sounds fun, and works just well enough to keep the chaos going.
Pump.fun isn’t just a place to launch tokens, it’s a full-blown freak show. Think less “crypto project,” more “internet performance .” The culture here is loud, shameless, and completely unfiltered.
Apologies in advance for what you’re about to learn.
The token names alone tell you everything. Some are so dumb they’re brilliant:
There’s no roadmap. No utility. Just names designed to grab attention and go viral, fast.
The Pump.fun crowd doesn’t wait for attention: they manufacture it. Fake news headlines, edited celebrity tweets, and AI-generated Trump quotes are all part of the game. You’ll see coins like $TATETOKEN, $KANYECOIN, or $TRUMP2024 being pumped by bots spamming Twitter and Telegram with copy-pasted hype.
Some creators even livestream their own token launches like it’s a Twitch speedrun. Others create multiple accounts just to fake buzz and dump on anyone who bites.
Others go even further. The most disturbing livestreams on Pump.fun include gun firing, kidnapping, a creator locking himself in a cage, and a fentanyl overdose. Fun, right? (*sarcasm*)
Plenty of tokens push the line or ignore it entirely. Racist slurs, NSFW imagery, and even outright hate speech have slipped through. Why? Because the platform is automated and the filters are weak. If the goal is to shock, offend, or confuse people into buying, mission accomplished.
Pump.fun isn’t trying to be serious. It’s trying to go viral. And in that world, degeneracy isn’t a bug — it’s a feature.
Pump.fun makes it easy to launch a token and just as easy to scam people with it.
Some developers promise that the token’s liquidity is “locked,” meaning they can’t run off with the money. In reality, that’s often a lie. Many find workarounds that let them pull the funds once the token gains attention. Others never bother pretending: they just launch, hype, dump, and disappear.
One example: a 13-year-old developer known online as “$Kid,” launched a token on Pump.fun, promising high returns and a “community-driven” roadmap. It quickly gained traction. Then, without warning, the project was abandoned, and the liquidity was drained. What followed was a storm of angry posts on X (formerly Twitter), with users trying to expose the identity of the teenage scammer who reportedly made $30,000 from the sale.
Sometimes it’s not about draining liquidity, it’s just about disappearing. A token launches, gains a following, promises staking or some made-up utility, and then… nothing. The Telegram goes quiet. The dev’s wallet goes inactive. And investors are left with worthless tokens and no one to blame.
Victims often take to social media, posting angry threads, tagging the platform, and calling for justice. Some even threaten legal action. But Pump.fun doesn’t take responsibility, and technically, they don’t have to. Everything is public, decentralized, and automated. That’s the tradeoff.
And yet, people keep coming back. Because maybe, just maybe, the next token will be the one.
Believe it or not, Pump.fun wasn’t built to be a scam machine. It was meant to make launching tokens easy, fast, and cheap: no coding, no gatekeeping.
For creators, it’s a way to test ideas or build meme communities with almost no friction. For traders, it’s non-stop action with transparent on-chain data and low fees.
A few projects actually gained traction, built communities, and moved on to bigger things. The platform itself is clean, smooth, and accessible, even if what people do with it isn’t.
So yes, there’s a bright side. But it’s buried under a lot of noise. But as with many things in crypto, the problem isn’t the tool, it’s how people use it.
Creating a meme coin on Pump.fun is almost too easy which is exactly the point. Here’s how it works:
Step 1: Go to Pump.fun and connect your wallet
Head over to Pump.fun and connect your Solana wallet. If you don’t have one, you’ll need to set up something like Phantom or Backpack first. Once you’re in, you’re one click away from going full degen.
Step 2: Click “Start a new coin”
This is where you give your token its identity or lack thereof.
You’ll need to enter:
Pro tip: You can also preload your own buy orders to front-run bots and sniper scripts. Just don’t act surprised when someone still beats you to it.
Launching a token costs around $2 worth of SOL, paid by the first buyer, not the creator. So technically, launching is free… if you can convince someone else to jump first.
Step 3: Buy your own token
Once the token is live, you’ll see its buy page. This includes:
As more people buy, the token price rises. The idea is to create just enough FOMO to push it toward a target market cap — usually something like $69,000, because of course it is…
Legally? Not exactly. But it’s skating on thin ice.
Pump.fun doesn’t host traditional scams, it just makes them easy to launch. Thanks to regulatory loopholes and decentralization, most tokens fall into a gray zone. If a user gets rugged, it’s often blamed on “DYOR” (do your own research), not the platform.
The bigger issue now is content moderation. Pump.fun’s livestreams have featured everything from animal abuse to self-harm threats — one user even endangered a goldfish on camera to boost their token. Another said he’d hang himself if his coin didn’t moon.
It’s crossing lines that regulators won’t ignore for long.
As Mikko Ohtamaa put it, Pump.fun has two choices: get shut down fast for doing nothing, or get shut down later when regulators finally catch up.
Not all Pump.fun tokens are total throwaways. Some stand out for their absurdity, community traction, or just how far they managed to pump before the inevitable crash. Here are a few of the platform’s infamous stars:
One of the earliest viral hits on Pump.fun. It did exactly what you’d expect: it went up fast on pure toilet humor, then dumped just as quickly. The creator? Unknown. The premise? “Smell the gains.” It briefly hit a $1 million market cap — yep, just like that.
Equal parts shock and strategy. This one leaned hard into offensive meme territory with an uncomfortably suggestive logo, but managed to attract a surprisingly loyal following. The dev played the long game, teasing updates and future plans before ghosting.
Started as a joke about hoarding tokens like squirrels hoard acorns but somehow evolved into a semi-serious community project. The creator dropped wholesome memes and interacted with traders, which helped $PNUT hold value longer than most. It eventually flatlined, but not before a few early believers made solid gains.
A Thai street food-themed token launched by a self-proclaimed “crypto chef.” It gained traction with Southeast Asian users and had a short-lived food-porn meme boom. The dev claimed it was the “first token you can taste.” Liquidity dried up within days.
Launched by an actual stand-up comic trying to blend clout-chasing with crypto. They livestreamed bad jokes while pumping $BAN, promising free show tickets to holders. Price went up during performances, then nosedived when the punchlines ran out. Still a cult favorite in some circles.
A feel-good token with zero promises and a dev who only posted photos of iced coffee and sunsets. Somehow, that vibe worked. $CHILLGUY stayed afloat longer than expected, mostly because nobody expected anything. Probably the least toxic coin in Pump.fun history.
Pump.fun is launching its native token, $PUMP, via an Initial Coin Offering (ICO) on Saturday, July 12. The token will have a total supply of 1 trillion, with 33% allocated to the ICO — split between a private and a public sale. Both sales are on the same terms: $0.004 per token, fully unlocked at launch.
The private sale is already fully subscribed.
Here’s how the rest of the supply is distributed:
24% for community and ecosystem initiatives
20% to the team
13% to existing investors
3% for livestreaming
2.6% for liquidity and exchanges
2.4% to the ecosystem fund
2% to the foundation
Pump.fun says it’s exploring future use cases for $PUMP, such as fee rebates, buybacks, and other incentives. No concrete utility has been confirmed yet.
An airdrop is also planned, though no details have been announced.
If you’re looking for serious investing, look elsewhere. Pump.fun is a casino: a flashy, chaotic, borderline-lawless one where most players lose and a few walk away grinning.
For casual users, this platform is a minefield. There are no safety nets, no refunds, and no guarantees just fast tokens, faster rugs, and a crowd that cheers the wreckage.
And yet, the degenerates will keep playing. The thrill of catching the next 100x is too tempting. The chaos is half the fun.
Pump.fun is crypto at its most unfiltered — equal parts hilarious, tragic, and dystopian.
Enter at your own risk.