@donggrabber@rileyyy717 There doesn’t need to be a dev the mechanics are on autopilot through the launch platform. But would be nice to have someone run an x page
I was in this coin from the start, even bidding on others with the same ticker.
Now it's obvious this is the winner.
$MEMESTOCK is one of those tickers that just sells itself. The dividend mechanic is a bonus, not the reason to own it.
S-tier narrative.
You don't get many opportunities like this.
@ExitlessTrader Give it a day or 2 and if he doesn’t we can get together and create a x page and community. I believe this was the first coin launched on flap?
Flap.Sh added new tax mode where you can distribute stocks to holders on Robinhood Chain
$MEMESTOCK is the first token on robinhood chain where the fees converted to stocks and distributed to holders of coin:
0x10dc3d3719b507e6bf3fc90c3d327d8590827777
flap.sh/robinhood/0x10…
THIS IS THE PERFECT NARRATIVE FOR ROBINHOOD CHAIN
Our @MarvelStudios Gacha is now live!
With great power comes great responsibility... and great pulls.
Inside, you’ll find incredible hits, including comic books signed by their creators and classic graded comics.
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Powered by @virtuals_io Built on @RobinhoodApp
I know WHY Robinhood Chain died
And 99% of people are blaming the wrong thing.
The real reason?
Snipers + stupid devs = 💀
On @Noxa_Fi, tokens launched directly into Uniswap V3 pools - with no bonding curve and no liquidity migration.
Noxa tried to protect launches with a few temporary restrictions:
— You couldn’t buy a token in the same block it was created.
— Each individual buy was capped.
— All restrictions disappeared after 366 blocks (roughly one hour).
The problem?
These protections looked much stronger on paper than they were in practice.
The 2% supply limit per wallet meant almost nothing when one operator could spread purchases across dozens of fresh wallets.
Trading could start at a random interval between 2 and 60 seconds.
Anonymous teams were already building and selling tools designed to spam launches and wash trade.
Noxa has earned $12M in fees and at least half of that value was captured by snipers.
Back on July 11, the Noxa team released an update attempting to address the spam and fake-volume problem.
But the clearest example of what was already happening is $ARROW:
200 interconnected wallets.
80% of the supply.
None of these wallets had any prior EVM history and they all bought $ARROW within the first three minutes of launch.
This entire situation was severely exacerbated by Robinhood's architecture.
Robinhood Chain officially uses a first-come, first-served (FCFS) sequencing model.
Transaction ordering is determined by the exact time they reach the sequencer, not by who pays a higher gas fee.
This means the ultimate advantage didn't go to those who paid more gas, but to those who had the fastest RPCs, automated bundlers and the lowest latency to the sequencer.
The block time for RH is up to 100ms, so by flooding every 100ms, you can almost guarantee that you’ll be among the first to buy.
Additionally, some optimizations in the sniper smart contract have made flooding cheaper than with others.
Anyone who has been in the Robinhood trenches since day one remembers that the space was originally pure PvE.
There were no bot wars and even beginners could easily trade.
But once the bots entered the game, things became incredibly difficult.
Additionally, as far as I know, there was a group of people executing DDoS attacks on the frontend.
They would buy the dips and then sell off once the website went down and retail couldn't access it.
Ultimately, the Noxa team couldn't handle the combined on-chain and off-chain pressure, which led to their decision to shut down.
This is just my theory, as the team hasn't shared any specifics, but it's the most logical explanation considering that 3 different launchpads are consistently running into the exact same issues.
By no means am I defending the teams behind @Noxa_Fi, @ponsdotfamily or @vladdotfun.
The responsibility lies on them for abusing vibecoding and completely ignoring audits.
These factors led to a major chill and the gradual death of the Robinhood.
What used to be a place where newcomers could chill in a PvE space and lock in solid gains has unfortunately devolved into the same chaotic casino as the Solana trenches.
A big thanks to @kauman0 for the information from snipers teams!