How did $ACKE launch?
Fair and clean. ~95% of 500M supply paired with SOL in a Raydium CLMM. Position owned by a PDA. No presale. No insiders.
The first proven, mathematically unruggable memecoin ever built.
A system where the rules are set on day one — and no one can change them ever.
Acke looks like a memecoin on the surface, but underneath it works more like a tiny DeFi system. There are no switches, no admin functions, no hidden permissions and no “maybe later” upgrades. It just runs.
The pool runs itself
Everything is handled by on-chain math. Every buy or sell quietly rebalances the pool in the background. Nobody makes decisions. Nobody has control.
At launch, about 95% of all tokens were placed into a Raydium CLMM pool and left there.
The position is owned by a PDA — a Program Derived Address — which means:
no private keys,
no withdrawals,
no owner,
no interference,
and no rugs possible.
Not now.
Not ever.
The liquidity pool is the contract —
and the contract is sealed forever.
PinkSale — but permanent
With PinkSale, there’s always an end date. The lock eventually expires and the team can reclaim the tokens.
With Acke, that never happens.
There is no unlock time, no hidden team wallet waiting in the background, and nothing that depends on trust.
It works like a launch phase that never ends — the lock never opens, the rules never change.
Why some scanners show warnings
Some platforms (like Jupiter) still flag Acke – not because something is wrong, but because their tools weren’t built to understand
PDA-owned CLMM locks. Acke uses a newer form of on-chain security than the detectors were designed for.
So when they see a PDA instead of a normal wallet, they mark it as “unknown”.
Even so, the setup is safer than many tokens that scanners label as “locked”.
A simple explanation of the engine that keeps Acke fair, locked, and predictable.
Acke’s pool started with one-sided liquidity — only $ACKE and no SOL on day one.
Think of it like a fixed presale price on PinkSale —
except with Acke, the phase never closes until every pool ACKE is sold.
Everyone gets access to the same fair starting point all the way up to the
Hard Cap (when the last ACKE in the pool is bought).
Why Acke Is Not a Presale
Acke can feel a little like a presale because most of the supply still sits inside the CLMM vault and unlocks slowly as people buy.
But it is not a presale in any real sense:
No private rounds.
No early discounts.
No insider allocations.
No SOL raised by the team.
No tokens sold before launch.
Acke launched publicly on Raydium from day one — everyone had the exact same entry point. Nobody got in before you. Nobody got a cheaper deal.
What feels like a “presale curve” is simply the vault releasing tokens naturally as the market wants them — but with all the fairness that presales never actually deliver.
During the Soft Cap, buys don’t move the price —
it follows SOL, and only SOL.
In a normal meme token, even small buys can pump the chart because liquidity is thin.
With Acke, that cannot happen during Soft Cap.
And the best part:
The SOL you put into Acke still behaves like SOL during the Soft Cap phase —
if SOL performs, your Acke position moves with it.
And that invested SOL isn’t going anywhere. While Acke remains in the Soft Cap, selling your Acke back into the pool simply returns your SOL — minus the normal trading fees.
Every time someone buys $ACKE, they leave their SOL behind in the vault.
That SOL doesn’t go to a team wallet or a presale investor — it becomes
locked buyback liquidity the pool can always use to buy ACKE back.
Your own SOL becomes part of the liquidity that’s waiting for you if you ever want to exit.
You don’t need a new wave of buyers to sell —
the liquidity is already there, locked in place, ready to take you out at any time
while the Soft Cap phase is still active.
The Soft Cap phase ends only when the very last ACKE in the pool has been purchased. From that point on, Acke trades like a normal token between holders.
The starting tick gave Acke a clear launch price and a clean ~200K market cap
— chosen up front, valued against SOL, with no presale or private deals.
As long as there are still ACKE left in the pool, the CLMM keeps the
ACKE : SOL relationship locked in.
The tick doesn’t “pump” because of volume — it mirrors SOL.
When SOL moves, Acke’s pool price moves with it, even on quiet days with little or no trading.
Once the Soft Cap is reached and the last pool ACKE is sold, the training wheels come off.
From there, price is set by pure supply and demand between holders —
but the SOL in the vault remains as a permanent guardian of the bottom,
always ready to buy ACKE back at the curve price.
The CLMM math locks this in permanently.
The vaults are the price.
They don’t lie — and nobody can change them.
At some point, every ACKE in the CLMM will be bought by holders.
When that happens, the system naturally shifts into its final state:
• All tokens are held by people.
• The pool’s remaining SOL becomes a permanent backing reserve.
• Trading becomes purely peer-to-peer.
• Acke behaves like a normal free-market asset.
Acke doesn’t require trust in a team — it removes the ability for anyone to change the rules at all.
This is what crypto was meant to be:
rules enforced by code, not by promises.
Pure facts. No promises, no spin.
Fair and clean. ~95% of 500M supply paired with SOL in a Raydium CLMM. Position owned by a PDA. No presale. No insiders.
CLMM position owned by PDA (no key). SPL mint has no mint/freeze authority. Supply locked forever.
No one. PDA owns the position. Only program logic can act.
Buy: SOL → pool → $ACKE out.
Sell: $ACKE → pool → SOL out.
CLMM math matches trades within range.
No manual buybacks or guarantees. But: buys accumulate SOL, sells release SOL — a mathematical buyback curve. If pool thins, trading shifts to peer-to-peer. Rules never change.
Transparent counter-asset. No promises of tracking — just clean math.
Tokens migrate to holders. Price becomes more peer-driven. Rules stay fixed.
No. Mint/freeze authorities = none. PDA owns liquidity. Nothing to reclaim.
~5% dev wallet for listings & infra. Fully disclosed on-chain.
Zero token tax. Only Solana + AMM fees.
Scanners often misread CLMM positions because they treat the vault as a “normal wallet holder.” When scanners update their CLMM logic, this will automatically classify as permanently locked
Check PDA ownership, mint authorities, and CLMM position on-chain. Links on this page.
Phantom → Raydium → paste mint. Start small. Verify.
Volatility, liquidity shifts, UI lag. No human risk — but full market risk.
No. It behaves similarly to a presale, but it is fully live liquidity on Raydium from day one. The “soft cap” effect comes from the CLMM mechanics, not from time-locked presale contracts. It is trustless, automated, and permanent — not a traditional presale.
Not promises. Not milestones. Just how $ACKE behaves over time.
95% of supply is locked inside a PDA-owned Raydium CLMM position. No mint. No freeze. No keys. No reclaim. No unlock. No administrative control. The structure is permanent.
Indexers, explorers, and scanners gradually update to show CLMM liquidity as permanently locked. The system doesn’t change — the interpretation does.
As $ACKE is held over time, the CLMM token inventory thins. Price discovery expands naturally. No one initiates this. It occurs by arithmetic and participation.
When the pool holds only SOL, trading shifts fully to direct exchange between holders. The SOL remains locked permanently. Price becomes pure consensus.
The structure outlives participants. The vault remains on-chain. The meme becomes historical. Time does the rest.
Four simple steps — no presales, no gatekeeping.
Download from the official site or app store (iOS, Android, browser).
Buy in Phantom or transfer from exchanges. Keep ~0.01 SOL for fees.
Open Raydium in Phantom and paste the mint address below.
Add the mint in Phantom to see your balance. Icon may take a moment.
Tip: If $ACKE isn’t listed, paste the mint above → “Add custom token” in Phantom.
Simple explanations of the words we use. No jargon, no gatekeeping.
An address created by a program, not by a person. There is no private key, which means nobody can log in, drain it, or take ownership. For Acke, this is what makes the liquidity truly untouchable.
A type of liquidity pool on Raydium where all trading happens inside a price range controlled by pure math. It decides how much ACKE and SOL move with each trade — automatically, without any human control or admin keys.
A public vault of tokens that buyers and sellers trade against. In Acke’s case, the pool holds $ACKE and SOL. When you buy, you take ACKE out and put SOL in. When you sell, you put ACKE back in and take SOL out.
One-sided liquidity means the pool launches with only one token instead of a full pair. For Acke, the CLMM started with $ACKE only and zero SOL in the vault.
The launch price wasn’t created by a whale dropping in a few cents of SOL — it was set intentionally at creation at a fair ~200K market cap valued against SOL. Raydium’s CLMM then converted that chosen price into the starting tick.
Because the pool began one-sided, the price is anchored to SOL during the entire Soft Cap phase. Until the last pooled ACKE is sold, the tick follows SOL’s movement rather than buy volume, keeping the launch fair and preventing early snipers from grabbing supply at near-zero cost.
How Acke’s launch price is set
In Raydium’s CLMM, a tick is a fixed price point on the pool’s curve. Every tick represents a predefined price step that the CLMM uses to calculate what 1 $ACKE is worth in SOL.
For Acke, the starting tick was not random and not chosen by a whale. It was intentionally selected at launch to give Acke a safe and fair starting price. The initial price was set so early buyers couldn’t scoop a huge share of the supply for almost nothing — something that ruins most new tokens. The launch valuation was approximately 200K market cap, based on the SOL price at that time.
After the starting price is set, the CLMM takes full control. As long as there are still $ACKE in the pool, the tick does not move based on buy volume. Instead, it mirrors SOL’s performance. If SOL rises, the $ACKE tick rises. If SOL falls, the tick falls. This happens because the pool is still in its one-sided liquidity phase, where price is anchored to SOL rather than supply–demand.
Only when the Soft Cap is reached — meaning the pool has sold out of $ACKE — does real market trading begin. From that moment on, price is determined by buyers and sellers, not by the SOL-pegged tick.
In simple terms: you set Acke’s fair launch price, the CLMM turned it into the starting tick, and until all pooled $ACKE are sold, the price follows SOL like a mirror.
The phase where there are still ACKE tokens left inside the pool. Everyone buys along the same curve, and every buy adds more SOL into the vault. It behaves a bit like a presale that never closes early — the rules stay the same for everyone until the pool runs out of tokens.
The moment the last ACKE in the pool has been bought. After that, all tokens are held by people, the pool mostly holds SOL, and trading becomes fully peer-to-peer. The rules never change — only who holds the supply.
A simple way to describe how $ACKE works under the hood. It isn’t just a meme with a picture — it’s a self-running mechanism made from an SPL mint, a Raydium CLMM pool, and PDA ownership. Once launched, it behaves like a small DeFi protocol with no admin panel and no off-switch.
Why Acke can’t die, break, or go to zero
The Guardian Reserve is the SOL that accumulates inside the CLMM from all earlier buys. This locked reserve is what allows the pool to buy $ACKE back from sellers at any time. It acts like a silent guardian behind the price — always on-chain, always locked, and never controlled by any team or wallet.
Even if zero new buyers ever appear, $ACKE does not collapse, break, decouple, or get rugged. As long as Solana exists and Raydium’s CLMM program is running, three things remain permanently true:
$ACKE cannot go to zero unless SOL goes to zero. Years from now, someone could rediscover a forgotten wallet, open Phantom, hit “Swap,” and still exit into whatever SOL the reserve holds — priced exactly where SOL is trading that day.
No maintenance. No dev activity required. No community needed. No trading volume necessary.
$ACKE is the closest thing crypto has to a perpetual, self-sovereign SOL derivative.
Most memecoins are fireworks.
Acke is a stone thrown into the blockchain — and decades from now, it will still be there, perfectly intact, reflecting SOL’s price on its surface.
Acke doesn’t need hype, maintenance, or belief to survive.
It simply continues — as long as Solana does.