Any top-tier launchpad isn't going to settle for a 2% tax model. Here's the thing—when you're competing for projects and credibility in this space, the fee structure signals your positioning. Premium platforms need premium economics to support infrastructure, security audits, compliance overhead, and community trust. A 2% fee cap would mean cutting corners somewhere, and that's a deal-breaker for serious projects choosing where to launch. The market has already separated the players: launchpads competing on volume and low fees are a dime a dozen, but the ones attracting flagship tokens? They're structured completely different.
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CoffeeNFTs
· 01-17 06:53
That 2% fee is really an insult to top-tier platforms. It's better to just do worthless coins directly.
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GasWaster
· 01-17 06:52
nah tbh this reads like cope for why fees stay bloated lol... been there tho, watched platforms justify every gwei increase w/ "premium positioning" 🙄 meanwhile i'm over here optimizing my cost-basis like it's life or death
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GasFeeGazer
· 01-17 06:49
2%? Haha, that's simply not realistic. Major projects definitely wouldn't consider platforms like this.
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wagmi_eventually
· 01-17 06:46
2%? Laughable. It's like asking why a top-tier restaurant doesn't sell takeout meals.
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AllTalkLongTrader
· 01-17 06:36
In plain terms, a 2% fee isn't enough to sustain a decent platform; this amount of money isn't even enough for an audit.
Any top-tier launchpad isn't going to settle for a 2% tax model. Here's the thing—when you're competing for projects and credibility in this space, the fee structure signals your positioning. Premium platforms need premium economics to support infrastructure, security audits, compliance overhead, and community trust. A 2% fee cap would mean cutting corners somewhere, and that's a deal-breaker for serious projects choosing where to launch. The market has already separated the players: launchpads competing on volume and low fees are a dime a dozen, but the ones attracting flagship tokens? They're structured completely different.