The Pump.fun Alternative That Runs on Pepecoin

Updated 28 May 2026 · By the TokenPrinter.fun team · ~12 min read

TL;DR — If you want a pump.fun alternative with lower fees, true self-custody, no priority-fee races, and a real order book instead of a bonding curve, TokenPrinter.fun runs on the Pepecoin blockchain. Launch a native PRC-20 token in minutes, trade live primary and secondary books from your browser wallet, and avoid the Solana mempool sniper meta entirely. This guide compares TokenPrinter.fun head-to-head with pump.fun, letsbonk.fun, moonshot, and boop.fun across nine criteria that matter to creators and traders.
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Why look for a pump.fun alternative at all?

Pump.fun built the memecoin launchpad category. It is fast, it is liquid, and it has the largest brand recognition in 2026. None of that is in dispute. The reason creators and traders search for “pump.fun alternative” anyway is that pump.fun is locked to Solana, and Solana has structural traits that hurt the launchpad use case: a public mempool that exposes pending transactions to bots, a priority-fee market where users pay extra to be included faster, and a forced AMM migration to Raydium that introduces a second fee layer and a discontinuity in the order book.

TokenPrinter.fun is the most-complete answer to that search on a non-Solana chain. It runs on the Pepecoin blockchain, charges flat platform fees (0.69% primary, 0.42% secondary), and uses a fixed-template primary launch followed by a live PSBT-based order book rather than a bonding curve. The browser wallet is self-custody by default. There is no privileged backend that could censor or front-run trades. This article walks through the comparison so you can decide whether the trade-offs fit your project.

Chain choice: Pepecoin vs Solana

Solana is a high-throughput proof-of-stake chain with sub-second finality. Its strengths are obvious: fast, cheap, established. Its weaknesses for launchpads are also obvious: priority-fee races, MEV from validators with order-flow visibility, and a culture of bot-first liquidity provision.

Pepecoin is a proof-of-work Layer 1 in the Dogecoin family. Blocks are slower (roughly one per minute), there is no priority-fee market in the Solana sense, and there is no validator-controlled order flow. Memecoin culture on Pepecoin is small but real, anchored by the PEP token and a long-running mining community. For creators, the practical effects are these: launches do not get sniped by a flood of priority-fee bots; the chain is genuinely commodity-CPU-mineable so distribution is more dispersed; and the smaller ecosystem means the audience is reachable through a handful of communities rather than fragmented across hundreds of Solana memecoin Discords.

Market structure: fixed template + order book vs bonding curve

Pump.fun, letsbonk, moonshot, and boop all use the bonding-curve model. Every buy pushes the price up and every sell pushes it down according to a mathematical function. The earliest buyer always gets the best price. When the curve hits a fill threshold, the token migrates to an external AMM (usually Raydium on Solana). There is no secondary order book in the traditional sense; price is mechanically determined by a curve until migration.

TokenPrinter.fun uses a different two-stage structure. The primary stage is a fixed-template launch: every primary buyer pays the same price per lot for a defined number of lots. There is no first-mover price advantage during the primary. When the primary fills to the graduation threshold, the token moves to a native PSBT-based secondary order book. Holders post asks at prices they choose; buyers fill the best available ask; trades settle peer-to-peer via signed PSBTs without a centralized AMM in between. This means there is real bid/ask discovery from the moment the secondary opens, rather than a curve-to-AMM discontinuity.

Fees: a worked $1,000-trade comparison

Headline fees only tell part of the story. Here is what actually leaves your wallet on a $1,000 buy on each platform in May 2026.

PlatformPlatform feeNetwork feeAMM fee (post-migration)Total on $1,000
TokenPrinter.fun (primary)0.69% ≈ $6.90~$0.005n/a~$6.91
TokenPrinter.fun (secondary fill)0.42% ≈ $4.20~$0.005n/a~$4.21
pump.fun (curve)1.00% ≈ $10.00~$0.10n/a until migration~$10.10
pump.fun (post-migration via Raydium)0% directly~$0.10 + priority~0.25%~$2.60 + priority race
letsbonk.fun~1%~$0.10 + priorityvaries~$10+
moonshot~1%~$0.10 + priorityvaries~$10+
boop.fun~1%~$0.10 + priorityvaries~$10+

The numbers above are headline math. The hidden cost on Solana platforms is the priority-fee race — users routinely pay an extra $0.50 to $5 in priority fees during launch windows to be included in the next block ahead of competing transactions. On Pepecoin there is no priority-fee market; you submit at the standard network fee and wait one block.

Custody: who holds your keys

TokenPrinter.fun’s wallet is browser-side. The private key is generated and stored in your browser only. The site cannot move funds, cannot freeze a balance, and cannot front-run a trade because there is no custodial backend with key access. You can export the key (as WIF) at any time and import it into Pepecoin Core, Coinomi, Komodo, or any other compatible wallet.

Pump.fun and most Solana launchpads connect to Phantom, Solflare, or Backpack. Those are also self-custody, which is good. The relevant difference is that TokenPrinter.fun does not require a separate wallet install — a brand-new user can complete a launch or a trade entirely from one browser tab. For onboarding new buyers who do not already have a crypto wallet, this matters.

Snipers, MEV, and the priority-fee meta

The Solana sniper meta is well-documented. A sniper bot watches the mempool for transactions that interact with the launchpad contract, identifies new token launches in flight, and submits a buy in the same or immediately following block with a high priority fee. The bot is first in the queue; human users are second or later. By the time a regular user’s buy lands, the bonding curve has moved several percent and the sniper is already selling into the new buyers. This is the structural reason early buyers on pump.fun routinely lose money to bots even when the underlying token does well.

TokenPrinter.fun side-steps this in two ways. First, the primary launch is fixed-template rather than a bonding curve, so being earlier in the same block does not produce a price advantage. Second, Pepecoin’s one-minute block time and lack of priority-fee market means there is no way for a sniper to pay to jump ahead of you within a block. Every primary buyer in a given block pays the same price. The result is that early-buyer outcomes correlate with conviction rather than bot infrastructure.

Head-to-head comparison

CriterionTokenPrinter.funpump.funletsbonkmoonshotboop.fun
ChainPepecoin (PoW L1)SolanaSolanaSolanaSolana
CustodyBrowser self-custodyPhantom etc.Phantom etc.Phantom etc.Phantom etc.
Primary marketFixed templateBonding curveBonding curveBonding curveBonding curve
Secondary marketNative PSBT order bookRaydium AMMExternal AMMExternal AMMExternal AMM
Primary fee0.69%~1.0%~1.0%~1.0%~1.0%
Secondary fee0.42%0.25% AMMvariesvariesvaries
Sniper exposureNoneHighHighHighHigh
Priority-fee racen/aYesYesYesYes
Launch cost~$5~$2-5~$2-5~$2-5~$2-5

For creators: when each platform makes sense

Use pump.fun if your audience is already Solana-native and your goal is maximum short-term liquidity. The category leader has the most eyeballs. The trade-off is that your launch is competing with dozens of new tokens every hour, and your earliest buyers will lose money to snipers more often than not.

Use TokenPrinter.fun if you want a launch that rewards real buyers, charges lower platform fees, and gives you a native secondary order book without an AMM migration discontinuity. The trade-off is a smaller addressable audience — Pepecoin is not yet a top-10 ecosystem — but the audience that is there is more aligned with proof-of-work and self-custody values, and conversion from holder to long-term holder is empirically higher.

For traders: how to evaluate a launch

The first metric to check is creator allocation. Anything above 5% is a yellow flag; anything above 15% is usually a rug in waiting. Second, look at the graduation threshold and whether the token has crossed it — tokens that have graduated to the secondary book are inherently lower risk than primary-only launches because real bids and asks exist. Third, check the on-chain creator wallet for prior launches; serial launchers with a graveyard of dead tokens are rarely worth a buy.

On TokenPrinter.fun specifically, the live order book shows every ask sorted by price, so you can see exactly where the next resistance is before you buy. The chart shows fills aggregated into one-minute candles. There is no hidden routing and no MEV bot in between.

Frequently asked questions

What is the best pump.fun alternative in 2026?

For traders and creators who want lower fees, true self-custody, no priority-fee races, and a real order book instead of a bonding curve, TokenPrinter.fun on the Pepecoin blockchain is the strongest pump.fun alternative in 2026.

Is TokenPrinter.fun really self-custody?

Yes. The wallet runs entirely in the browser and the private key is stored in your browser only. TokenPrinter.fun cannot move your funds, freeze your balance, or front-run your trades.

Why are bonding-curve launchpads vulnerable to snipers?

A bonding curve prices every token in real time as a function of supply purchased so far. The earliest buyers always get the best price, so bots race to be the first transaction included in the next block. TokenPrinter.fun avoids this by using a fixed-price primary template with discrete lots.

What does it cost to launch a token on TokenPrinter.fun?

Typically under five US dollars worth of PEP including the on-chain inscription and the standard Pepecoin network fee. There is no separate platform launch fee.