How it works

A fair start, then ignition.

Fuze is a fair-entry pre-market that fires onto pump.fun. The community pools SOL toward a goal while a countdown runs. Hit the goal in time and the token is created and bought in one transaction — the pooled SOL is the first buy, so there's no earlier block for a sniper to grab. Miss it, and everyone gets 99% back.

The three acts

1

Set the fuze

A creator sets a liquidity goal and a countdown — or schedules a start time. The launch sits ready; nothing fires until the community shows up. The defaults are the protections: the creator can't loosen the caps or the refund.

2

The community lights it

Buyers commit SOL into the launch's own escrow while the clock runs. Every commit is capped at 20% of the goal, so it takes a crowd. Commit past the goal and only what fits is charged — the rest stays in your wallet.

3

Ignition → liftoff

The instant the goal is hit, the token is created and the whole pool buys it in a single atomic transaction. It's live on pump.fun, and everyone who committed entered at the same price. If the clock wins first, the launch never fires and 99% is refundable, automatically.

What protects you — every one live on-chain today

No snipers

Creation and the first buy happen in one transaction — the community's pooled SOL is that buy. There's no moment where the token exists un-bought, so a bot has no earlier, cheaper block to front-run. Everyone enters at one price.

Whale-capped

No wallet can commit more than 20% of the goal. Filling a launch therefore takes at least five distinct wallets — no one corners the supply on the way in.

Creators can't dump

The creator's allocation is capped and vests over 28 days, and they can't commit to their own launch. They earn by the token surviving — not by exiting on you.

99% back if it doesn't launch

No fill, no launch, no risk beyond a 1% protocol fee. Your SOL sits in the launch's own escrow until it ignites or returns to you — claimable any time.

Why you can trust the words

Every claim is a mechanism, not a promise.

All of the above runs in the launch contract on-chain — no admin switch, no discretion, no "trust us." We only publish a protection the day its code is live and checkable. Words document what's in the contract — never the reverse.