Last updated: July 13, 2026
Memecoins are the highest-risk corner of crypto, and launching or trading them through Greenlit does not make them safer. Read this page before your first transaction — it is written to be understood, not skimmed.
Assume that any money you put into a memecoin — as a creator or a buyer — can go to zero, permanently, at any moment, without warning and without recourse. Only spend what you can afford to lose entirely.
Most newly launched tokens lose most of their value. There is no floor price, no market maker with obligations, no circuit breaker, and no one who can pause trading while you reconsider. Gas spent on failed or regretted transactions is also gone.
Memecoin prices can move by orders of magnitude within minutes. New pools often have very little liquidity, so even modest trades can move the price dramatically, quoted prices can differ wildly from executed prices, and exiting a position at anything near the displayed price may be impossible. Charts on this interface are built from on-chain swap history and can lag or gap; never treat a displayed price as a promise of an executable one.
Tokens launched through Greenlit are entertainment assets. They represent no ownership, equity, debt, revenue share, governance rights, or claim on anyone or anything. They pay no dividends or interest. Their price is driven entirely by attention and speculation.
Buy a memecoin only for the meme — with no expectation of profit from the efforts of the creator, the Operator, or anyone else. A creator earning trading fees has no duty to keep promoting, developing, or even acknowledging their token, and many stop the day after launch.
Launches and trades execute through immutable smart contracts — the Doppler protocol, Uniswap v4, WETH, and the token contracts themselves. Smart contracts can contain bugs, behave unexpectedly under unusual conditions, or be exploited; audits and reviews reduce this risk but never eliminate it. Greenlit verifies that deployed contract runtime bytecode matches reviewed hashes before enabling a launch, which protects against swapped or tampered deployments — it does not prove the reviewed code itself is flawless. A contract-level failure can destroy all value in a pool with no undo.
Robinhood Chain (chain ID 4663) is a young network. Newer chains have shorter track records and can experience sequencer downtime, congestion, reorgs, RPC and explorer outages, or breaking changes. Tooling around it — indexers, explorers, wallets — is also younger and less battle-tested than on older networks. Some wallets and services may not recognize the chain or its tokens at all.
A confirmed blockchain transaction cannot be reversed by you, the Operator, or anyone else. Sending tokens to a wrong or inaccessible address, approving a malicious contract, mistyping an amount, or transferring fee rights to an address you do not control are all permanent. There is no support line that can restore funds, and there is no custodian to appeal to. Check every detail before signing.
Every Greenlit pool charges a 0.80% swap fee split 60% to the creator fee recipient, 35% to the platform, and 5% to the Doppler protocol. This is fixed in the pool at launch and can never be changed for an existing token — not raised, not lowered, not redirected, regardless of circumstances. Each share’s owner can transfer its entire fee right to another address; transferring it to a wrong address permanently redirects that revenue. Details are in the fees section of the Terms.
Crypto assets held in self-custody are not bank deposits and not securities accounts. They are not insured or guaranteed by the FDIC, SIPC, or any government scheme, and no private insurance covers your use of this interface. If value is lost — to a market move, an exploit, or your own error — nobody reimburses you.
The legal treatment of token creation, promotion, trading, and fee income is unsettled and varies sharply by jurisdiction. Regulators may take positions — retroactively — that affect tokens you created or hold, the fees you earn, or your tax obligations. Creating and promoting a token can expose you to securities, commodities, consumer-protection, and tax rules; earning creator fees may be taxable income.
The interface itself may become unavailable in some jurisdictions, or entirely, if the regulatory picture demands it. Because it is non-custodial, that never traps your assets — but interface features you relied on (discovery, charts, the claim UI) may disappear, and you would need other tools to interact with your tokens and fee rights.
Public blockchains expose pending transactions before they confirm. Automated actors (“MEV bots”) routinely front-run, back-run, and sandwich trades in new memecoin pools — buying just before your buy and selling right after, worsening your effective price. Slippage settings limit but do not eliminate this. Assume sophisticated bots are active in every pool from its very first block.
Greenlit lets a creator make an optional initial purchase (up to 2 ETH) in the same transaction that launches their token. That means a creator can hold a meaningful share of early supply at the lowest prices, and can sell it at any time — into liquidity that later buyers provided. Before buying any token, look at the creator’s and largest holders’ balances on the explorer and assume early concentration can and will be sold.
A verified badge means a token’s on-chain configuration matched the Greenlit preset when checked: fixed 1B supply, locked Uniswap v4 liquidity, the immutable 60/35/5 fee split, disabled controller, and wallet-signed metadata. It says nothing about the human behind the token — their identity, honesty, or plans — the truth of the description, the legality of the content, or the future of the price. A scam can be perfectly configured.
Nobody involved in this interface can research a token for you. Before creating or buying anything: