Our approach: how we engineer believable Solana volume

We build one Solana volume bot that has to pass a single test: does the activity read like a crowd of independent traders, or like a machine running a loop. If it reads like a machine, it is worthless, no matter how large the number gets. Everything on this page explains how we hold to that standard across Pump.fun, Bonk.fun and Raydium, where we draw hard lines, and what we refuse to promise. This is written by the people who operate the engine, so you can weigh the reasoning, not just scan a feature list.

Why believable volume beats spam

Crude volume tools chase one metric and call it a day: push the number, print a green candle, move on. We started from the other side of the screen. The question that matters is not "how many transactions can we fire" but "what does this launch look like to a sharp trader reading the holder distribution, the trade feed and the comment section." If the honest answer is "one operator wearing a hundred masks," the volume actively hurts, because clustered, metronomic, comment-free activity is the exact signature scanners and experienced buyers discount on sight. So our memecoin volume bot is designed for believability first and raw size second. The trading logic, the social layer and the wallet fleet are built as one system rather than bolted together, because a moving chart with no chatter, or size that all lands from sibling wallets, is a tell, not a signal.

The anti-detection engineering

Believability is not a slogan here; it is a set of properties we engineer deliberately, each one closing a gap that would otherwise expose the session.

  • A rotating, ephemeral fleet. Every run spins up fresh disposable wallets funded with randomized SOL, so no two start alike, and addresses are never reused between sessions. Reuse is the single easiest thread for a clustering tool to pull, so we cut it off entirely.
  • Human-shaped timing and sizing. Trade sizes follow a long-tailed mix instead of round lots, and transactions are spaced on Poisson-distributed intervals rather than a fixed heartbeat. We also keep our own trades out of adjacent blocks, because regular cadence and tidy numbers are what light up cluster detection.
  • A social layer that moves with the trades. Multilingual auto-comments come from separate wallets with varied voice and rhythm, and auto-favorites are spread across distinct addresses, loosely correlated with activity but never in lockstep. A chart that moves while the page stays silent is one of the loudest tells there is.
  • Private, anti-MEV routing. Orders route through Jito with randomized tips, so they stay out of the public mempool and cannot be sandwiched by predatory bots.

If you want the plain-English version of whether this is safe to use, we lay it out in is a Pump.fun volume bot safe, and we cover how these signals feed exposure in how to get on Pump.fun trending.

One bot across Pump.fun, Bonk.fun and Raydium

A Solana launch does not live in a single venue, so neither does our engine. The same bot works a Pump.fun volume bot session on the bonding curve, runs as a Bonk.fun volume bot on LetsBonk (letsbonk.fun) launches, and continues as a Raydium volume bot once a token graduates to the AMM. It is one tool with several platform angles, not three products stitched together. When a token migrates, the engine performs a launchpad-to-Raydium auto-handoff so the footprint does not fall off a cliff at the exact moment new eyes arrive, and it can mirror activity across Meteora and Orca for coins that trade in more than one pool. You can read the venue-specific detail on the Raydium volume bot and Bonk.fun volume bot pages.

The non-custodial trust model

We never ask for your main private key, and we never take custody of your funds. You fund a deposit wallet, the engine derives disposable sub-wallets from it, those sub-wallets do the work, and they are discarded when the session ends. Stop a run early and the unused deposit returns to your wallet immediately, with no support ticket and no waiting queue. We treat an opaque refund path as a red flag in any tool, and we hold ourselves to the same instant-refund standard we would demand of anyone else. You can watch the whole thing unfold in real time from the browser dashboard, with live metrics on every wallet and trade.

Why the fee is a flat 2%

We charge a flat 2% commission on the volume you request, all-inclusive, and nothing else. We chose this over tiered subscriptions on purpose. Subscriptions almost never fit a specific launch: you end up paying for runtime and wallet caps that miss the mark, and gas frequently lands back on your own bill anyway. A flat commission ties our income directly to your output and folds every on-chain cost into one number: network fees, priority fees, Jito tips, wallet funding, comments and favorites are all inside the 2%. If a competitor quotes a rate that quietly excludes network fees, that is a trap, and we will say so plainly. Honest pricing is part of the product, not a footnote to it. Start from the home page to see the calculator and current limits.

A candid word on risk and ethics

We would rather lose a sale than mislead you. Any live-looking figure in this interface (telemetry previews, session counters, latency readouts) is an illustrative, client-side simulation of the dashboard, and we label it that way. It is not a claim of real platform volume, user counts or audited statistics. We do not guarantee a trending rank, a price move or any financial outcome, because no honest tool can. Trading memecoins on Solana carries real risk, including total loss, and nothing on this site is financial advice. A volume bot is a distribution tool for a launch that already deserves attention; it is not a substitute for a real token, a real community or your own judgment. We would rather be the tool that tells you that than the one that pretends otherwise.