7 hours ago
Been around the memecoin space for a while and honestly things have changed a lot from what they used to be.
Few years back, launching a coin was simple. Copy a contract, change the name, set your taxes, deploy. Done. Most people didn't even write their own code. Nobody really asked questions either, community just aped in and hoped for the best.
Now the whole process is different.
People actually check the contract before buying. Communities are smarter, they know what a honeypot looks like, they know how to read basic tokenomics. So if your memecoin development is sloppy, it gets called out fast in Telegram or Twitter within minutes of launch.
Multi-chain is also a big thing now. Ethereum, Solana, Base, BSC — projects spread across chains because that's where the liquidity is. Sticking to one chain feels limiting these days.
Anti-snipe mechanics, launch protection, locked liquidity — these used to be nice extras. Now if you skip them people assume something shady is going on.
Audits are more common too. Not every project does it but the ones that skip it get side-eyed by the community.
The meme and the culture still drive everything at the end of the day. But the technical side has quietly gotten more serious.
What's your experience been? Still seeing lazy launches or are standards actually going up?
Few years back, launching a coin was simple. Copy a contract, change the name, set your taxes, deploy. Done. Most people didn't even write their own code. Nobody really asked questions either, community just aped in and hoped for the best.
Now the whole process is different.
People actually check the contract before buying. Communities are smarter, they know what a honeypot looks like, they know how to read basic tokenomics. So if your memecoin development is sloppy, it gets called out fast in Telegram or Twitter within minutes of launch.
Multi-chain is also a big thing now. Ethereum, Solana, Base, BSC — projects spread across chains because that's where the liquidity is. Sticking to one chain feels limiting these days.
Anti-snipe mechanics, launch protection, locked liquidity — these used to be nice extras. Now if you skip them people assume something shady is going on.
Audits are more common too. Not every project does it but the ones that skip it get side-eyed by the community.
The meme and the culture still drive everything at the end of the day. But the technical side has quietly gotten more serious.
What's your experience been? Still seeing lazy launches or are standards actually going up?

