Updated July 14, 2026
There are at least a dozen launchpads on Robinhood Chain, and almost none of them will tell you the thing that matters most: who can change your token after it launches.
This is every launchpad we could find, compared on the facts they publish themselves. We build one of them, so read the where others beat us section too — it is not decoration.
| Launchpad | Creation fee | Creator's share of trading fees | Launch model | Liquidity | Discloses admin powers? | Supply |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GreenlitThis site | None — gas only | 0.48% of all volume (60% of the 0.80% pool fee) | Instant Uniswap v4 pool. No curve, no migration. | Locked at launch | Yes — no admin keys, no mint, no pause, no blacklist. Contracts are checked against reviewed hashes before every launch and a mismatch blocks it. | Fixed at deployment, no mint function |
| hood.fun | 0 ETH (migration fee: 3% of raise + 0.05 ETH) | 80% of a creator-set 1–5% curve fee; 50% of the 1% pool fee after graduation | Bonding curve → graduation to Uniswap v3 | Locked — locker has no withdraw function | Yes — owner may adjust fees within hard-coded caps and withdraw the protocol's fee share; states it cannot touch curves, balances, or liquidity | 1,000,000,000 |
| The Furnace | None — gas only | 1.00% on the curve; 50–90% of the 1% pool fee after graduation, chosen at launch | Bonding curve → graduation, or an instant pool | Locked — explicitly locked rather than burned | Not stated | Not stated |
| HOODPAD | “Small, fixed” — amount not published | 0.8% of volume (of a 1.2% trading fee) | “Seeded with liquidity from the start” | Not stated | Not stated | Not stated |
| DYOR Fun | 0.0005 ETH | Not stated | Instant Uniswap v3 pool. No curve. | Locked — vault has no owner or upgrade function | Yes — states launch tokens share an owner-controlled upgradeable beacon, so token logic can be changed; the LP vault is carved out of that authority | 1,000,000,000, no transfer tax |
| 4-6-6-3.fun | None — gas only | 50% of the creator-chosen pool fee (0.05%, 0.30%, or 1.00%) | Instant Uniswap v3 pool. No curve. | Locked by contract design; principal cannot be withdrawn | Not stated | 1,000,000,000, no future mint function |
| robinlaunch.fun | 0.002 ETH | 0.5% of volume (half of a 1% fee); 50% of pool fees after graduation | Bonding curve → graduation at 2.5 ETH, or an instant pool | Held by an LpFeeCollector contract on current launches | Not stated | 1,000,000,000 |
| robinfun.live | Not stated | 0.5% of volume (half of a 1% fee), before and after graduation | Bonding curve → graduation at ~$44k market cap to Uniswap v2 | Burned — LP tokens sent to a burn address | Not stated | 1,000,000,000 |
| ArrowPad | Publishes no fee, liquidity, or contract disclosures. Its site, docs, and FAQ pages serve no readable content. | |||||
| LaunchFlow | Publishes no fee, liquidity, or contract disclosures. Its site and docs serve no readable content. | |||||
| NOXA Fun | Its domain did not resolve when we checked. It was live recently, so this may be temporary. | |||||
Read from each platform's own site and docs on July 14, 2026. Not stated means the platform does not publish that information — it is not an accusation, but it is worth knowing.
A table flattens things that deserve a sentence. These are the ones we would want to know if we were choosing:
Ignore the landing page. Four questions decide whether a launch is safe and whether it is worth your time, and you can answer all four from a launchpad's own docs — or notice, tellingly, that you cannot.
This is the question almost nobody asks and almost nobody answers. Can anyone mint more supply, pause transfers, blacklist a wallet, add a transfer tax, or upgrade the contract's logic? If a launchpad does not tell you, assume you do not know — and note that seven of the working launchpads we checked say nothing at all about this.
Locked means the LP position is held by a contract with no withdraw function. Burned means the LP tokens were destroyed outright. Both are fine. “Neither” means someone can pull the floor out from under the market, and that is the classic rug.
A bonding curve sells into a rising price until a threshold, then graduates liquidity to a real DEX pool. It works, but it adds a step where liquidity moves — and any step where liquidity moves is a step where something can go wrong or be exploited. A launchpad that opens a real pool at block one has no such moment.
Read the split, not the headline. “1% trading fee” usually means the creator sees half of it. And a fee the creator sets themselves is not free money: a 5% trade fee is paid by the people you need to keep trading your coin.
We are not going to run a comparison page and pretend we win every column. We do not.
Some pay creators a bigger cut. HOODPAD advertises 0.8% of volume to the creator, and The Furnace lets a creator take up to 0.9% of the pool fee after graduation. Both are more than our 0.48%. If the single number you are optimizing for is headline creator percentage, we are not the top of the table.
What we would say in our defence is that the percentage is only half the equation, and the trade fee is the other half. A creator's income is their share times the volume that actually happens, and every basis point of trade fee is friction that suppresses the volume you are trying to earn from. 0.48% of a market people want to trade in beats 0.9% of one they abandon. But that is an argument, not a fact, and you should weigh it yourself.
Some offer more launch modes. If you specifically want a bonding curve, a transfer tax, or a presale-style raise, we do not offer any of them and are not going to. The Furnace and hood.fun do.
hood.fun documents itself well. Their whitepaper is genuinely the most transparent competitor document we read, and their liquidity locker is designed on the same principle as ours — no withdraw function, so the code that could move liquidity does not exist.
Three things, and they are all in the table above:
If what you want is a coin nobody — including us — can quietly alter after the fact, that is the whole design.
Everything above was read from each launchpad's own site or documentation on July 14, 2026, and every row links to the page we read it from. Where a platform does not publish something, we wrote Not stated rather than guessing.
We have an obvious interest here, so hold us to it. If we have your platform wrong, or your docs have changed since we checked, email legal@greenlit.fun and we will correct it.
Four things decide whether a launch is safe and worth it: whether liquidity is locked (and for how long), whether the token contract retains admin keys such as mint, pause, or blacklist functions, what share of trading fees the creator actually keeps, and whether the pool is live immediately or gated behind a bonding curve and migration step.
Several launchpads including Greenlit charge no upfront creation fee, so you pay only gas. The more meaningful number is the ongoing split of trading fees: that is where the real money is over a token's life, and it varies widely between platforms.
A bonding curve sells tokens along a rising price curve until a threshold is hit, at which point liquidity 'graduates' to a DEX. It delays real liquidity and adds a migration step that can fail or be exploited. Launchpads that open a real DEX pool at block one skip that risk entirely.