How to Launch a Meme Coin on Robinhood Chain

The Bandit Team4 min read

Launching a meme coin used to mean writing a contract, deploying it, and hoping you did not leave a bug that drains the liquidity. On Bandit it takes about two minutes and no code. Here is the whole process, start to finish.

What you need

  • A wallet such as MetaMask or Rabby, connected to Robinhood Chain (chainId 4663).
  • A small amount of ETH on Robinhood Chain for gas, plus more if you want an optional dev-buy at launch.
  • A name, a ticker, and an image for your coin. Socials are optional but help it spread.

Step 1: Connect your wallet

Open bandit.fun and connect your wallet. If you are on the wrong network the app will prompt you to switch to Robinhood Chain. New to the chain? Start with our guide to Robinhood Chain.

Step 2: Fill in your coin

Head to Launch a coin and enter your name, ticker, and image. Then pick a raise tier. The tier sets how much the bonding curve needs to raise before your coin graduates:

  • Quick Shot (2 ETH) — a shallow curve that graduates fast.
  • Power Play (4 ETH) — a balanced curve.
  • Moon Mission (8 ETH) — the deepest curve for the biggest launches.

Step 3: Optional dev-buy

You can buy your own coin at the moment of launch, up to about 10% of the raise target. A dev-buy seeds early momentum and signals conviction, but it is entirely optional. Every coin has a fixed supply of one billion tokens, so a dev-buy is a share of that fixed pie, not new tokens minted for you.

Step 4: Launch

Confirm the transaction. Your coin is live on the bonding curve the moment it confirms, tradable in native ETH, with a page of its own on the board.

What happens next: the curve and graduation

Buyers and sellers trade against the bonding curve, priced in WETH. As the curve fills, your coin graduates: its liquidity migrates into a canonical Uniswap V3 pool and the LP position is locked forever, so no one can pull it. As the creator you earn 30% of trading fees. If you want the mechanics in depth, read bonding curves and graduation, explained.