Browser-native creation. Harder token end states.
Click to Launch is built around the extension first: attention forms in the feed, creation begins in the browser, and successful tokens should leave graduation in a stronger state than they entered it.
Most launchpads still behave like destination websites. Attention forms on X, TikTok, Twitch, group chats, and image threads, but the actual launch begins somewhere else. Users have to copy links, save assets, switch tabs, and rebuild the same context inside a separate product.
If the launch surface lives too far from where the idea was found, the product is already late.
The economics are usually just as blunt. A flat trading fee gets extracted at the platform level, creator participation is inconsistent, and tokens often graduate with mint authority still live, freeze authority intact, or liquidity that doesn't actually compound. The end state is softer than the launch.
Launchpads should meet attention where it forms, make the fee path legible, and leave successful tokens in a stronger state after graduation than before it.
The shortest path between attention and token creation should be native to the browser.
Click to Launch is built around the extension first. If a post, clip, or image deserves a token, the launch flow should begin from the page where you found it, not after a context switch into another dApp. The website launcher matters too, but the extension is the real product insight: distribution should start where culture is already happening.
We also believe alignment should be structural, not rhetorical. Fee routing should be explicit. Creator participation should be part of the trade path. Graduation should harden the token mechanically instead of leaving lingering admin authority or soft liquidity guarantees.
CTL is designed to reduce launch friction at the top of the funnel and improve token quality at the bottom of the lifecycle.
Transparent economics. Graduation that hardens the token.
The product difference is not just launch speed. It is the combination of browser-native creation, explicit fee routing, and a graduation flow that leaves no admin path behind.
Transparent economics
CTL keeps the headline trading fee at 1.00%, but routes it in three visible directions instead of treating it like a black box:
- 0.50% protocol fee
- 0.25% creator fee
- 0.25% liquidity reserve
The creator participates on every trade. The protocol earns enough to sustain the system. And a third path accumulates in a per-token liquidity reserve that improves the token's post-graduation state instead of disappearing into platform revenue. The split prioritizes operating sustainability without making the platform the largest winner on any single trade.
Liquidity that compounds
Token creation remains 0.02 SOL plus network fees. The user-facing cost stays simple even though the underlying fee routing is more deliberate.
On CTL native launches, the liquidity reserve is not just an idea. It is an on-chain fee path. During bonding-curve trading, 0.25% of the SOL leg accumulates in a per-token reserve PDA. At graduation, that reserve is swept into the Raydium pool alongside the curve's retained SOL, increasing depth exactly where successful tokens need it most.
Graduation that hardens the token
Graduation is not merely “move to Raydium.” At the 85 SOL threshold, CTL native graduation creates the Raydium CPMM pool, burns 100% of the minted LP in the same instruction, revokes mint authority to None, revokes freeze authority to None, and finalizes the curve atomically.
That leaves a cleaner end state: permanent liquidity, no supply-side admin path, no freeze-side admin path, and no partial migration flow. Successful tokens leave the curve in a materially harder configuration than they entered it.
The live route is opinionated. The assumptions are explicit.
The v1 claim set is concrete: fixed creation fee, explicit fee routing, fixed graduation threshold, and a post-graduation token with no mint or freeze authority left behind.
Foundation now. Mainnet readiness next.
The thesis is already reflected in the devnet route. The remaining work is operational polish, audit completion, and pushing the same structure into the mainnet launch path.
Protocol foundation
- CTL native program running on Solana devnet
- Extension and website launch surfaces both live
- Canonical IDL, pinned toolchain, and audit handoff package prepared
- Graduation path verified locally against pinned Raydium CPMM fixtures
Mainnet readiness
- Complete external audit and incorporate any required fixes
- Mainnet deployment of the CTL native route
- Creator fee claim surfaces and operator tooling
- End-to-end polish across the extension and website
Ecosystem layer
- Creator analytics and reputation surfaces
- Deeper token dashboards and discovery tooling
- Mobile-native launch experiences
- Additional ecosystem features only if they preserve the core economic alignment
The launch surface matters. So does the end state.
Click to Launch is not trying to be another website that captures meme flow after the fact. It is trying to be the shortest path between attention and token creation, with cleaner economics during trading and a stronger end state after graduation.
The thesis is simple. The extension makes launches native to the browser. The fee path stays legible. Successful tokens graduate into permanent, admin-free liquidity.
Disclaimer: CTL is in active development. The concrete v1 claims on this page are limited to the current CTL native route, including the 0.02 SOL creation fee, the 1.00% total trade fee split, and the 85 SOL graduation path with LP burn and authority revocation. Nothing on this page is a guarantee of future returns or a promise of discretionary rewards.