Live on mainnet · Built in Canada

Launch, manage, and distribute Solana tokens.

Self-custody by default. Direct program calls — works on fresh launches before any aggregator catches up. Bundled trading across pump.fun, Raydium, and bonk.fun.

What you can do here

A full-stack token toolkit, no abstraction layers between you and the chain.

Most launchers hide what's happening on-chain behind a single button. soups.tools shows you the moving parts and lets you assemble them yourself — bonding curves, atomic Jito bundles, vanity addresses, fee splits, mixers, smart-exit triggers, agentic trading. When you're ready to fly without us, you already know what each piece does.

Built for learning

Outgrow us. We'd rather be your launching pad than your dependency.

Most token tools are black boxes. Push button, get token, pay fee, no idea what just happened on-chain. That trains nobody.

Toggle Teaching Mode in the top bar (the ⓘ pill) and every option on every page explains what it is, what it does, and the consequences of each choice. Bonding-curve mechanics, atomic-bundle layout, fee splits, the role of each transaction in your launch — visible instead of buried.

The patterns you learn here — building a Jito bundle, grinding a vanity mint, deriving a creator-vault PDA, structuring a multi-tx atomic operation — are the same patterns you'd use writing your own Rust or TypeScript launcher from scratch. Use us until you don't need us. We're happy to be the launching pad to your token-dev career, not a permanent middleman.

Already past the curve? Leave teaching mode off and the tools work like any other launcher — fast and quiet.

On rugs and scams

We don't police what you do, but we're honest about what we build.

Most token-launch tools say nothing about this and quietly enable both. We won't pretend we're saving the ecosystem either, but we'll tell you what we actually do.

We don't promote rug pulls. We don't build features that exist solely to enable scams. We don't whitelist scam-friendly bundlers. The features here exist because they exist on-chain anyway — sniper bots, MEV, vanity addresses, atomic bundles, fee-divert tricks, agent-buyback exploits — and the best defense against them is for honest devs to understand them too.

We don't police what you do with the tools. If you're set on running a scam, you'll figure it out with or without us. We've made it harder to automate scams (no pre-built honeypot templates, no rug-friendly defaults, no anonymous-by-default flows), but a determined bad actor will find the path. What we can do is make sure the next thousand honest devs starting out know what they're walking into and don't get rugged by the same patterns three times before they figure it out.

Ready to start?

Connect your wallet, pick a tool, and ship something. Turn on teaching mode if it's your first time — the explanations save you a lot of expensive mistakes.