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How to configure your token on Focus? (Free)
A Complete Guide by @TheRenaissanceMan
Most tokens are launching with the default configurations the Focus token launcher provides, which is not a good fit for all tokens. In this article, you will understand how to set all the configurations on the token launcher and launch your token for long-term success.
As this article discuss each configuration options one by one, you can read selectively.
First, Find the Launch token button in the $Trade section and select your category (Meme/Creator/Other).
Once you are in you will see these 3 sections.
We will see each configuration options one by one
Token Properties section
Revenue share - Simply the percentage of your earnings that goes to your token holders. If you earn 100$, with revenue share set to 10%, 10$ goes to your holders instantly which is divided among them proportionally based on their holdings of your coin.
- For meme coins this can be set as high as 100%.
- For creator coins, it's totally up to the creator but anything 1 - 10% is optimal.
Trading Fee - you will get a percentage of every single buy and sell txns on your token. If someone sells 100$ worth of your coins, with 1% trading fee you get 1$.
High trading fee means low volume (People make minimal number of trades to avoid high fees) resulting in low earnings for the creator from trading fees. Very low trading fees allow large volume of trading but minimal earnings from trading fees.
So, the goal here is, to find an optimal point that doesn't discourage traders from making trades but also earn the token owner a fair share.
- For meme coins this should be set to very low (<2.5%).
- For creator coins, it depends on the creator's goal. Anything between 5 - 7.5% is optimal. If the creator encourages long-term holding of their coin and not quick trades, this can be set as high as 30% (while this might affect earnings through trading fees & very low trading volume for the coin).
Ownership This is how much of the total supply you will own.
- For meme coins this should be very low (< 5%).
- For creator coins anything up to 55% is acceptable.
Ownership Lock Up Is how long it takes for the coin you set aside for your-self to become tradable. At least a few months is expected & even longer for creator coins to show their strong belief in their coin's long-term potential.
Yield - Is how much your holders get for locking up your coin. If your coin holders lock their coin for a year, at 10% yield, they will receive their full amount + 10% of your coin after a year. If the creator wants to encourage their holders to hold their coin for the long term, increasing this value may help. But increasing this too much will also increase the supply substantially and inflate the price.
Under danger zone
Lock trading fee - If enabled, you can't change the trading fee you set at launch.
- For meme coins - Recommended
- For creator coins - Not recommended. You may want to increase the fees in the future based on different circumstances (which should be done carefully with announcement).
Permanently lock your revenue share - If enabled, you can't change the revenue share you set at launch.
- Meme coins - Recommended
- For creator coins - Not recommended. You may want to change this in the future to make it higher or lower.
Permanently disable minting coins - If enabled, the supply at launch will be fixed forever.
- Highly recommended. This gives a lot of confidence for buyers/holders and is very unlikely to ever be used.The only case I can see it being used is for **coin splitting - **to mint new coins and distribute it to all holders proportionally to increase the supply and reduce the price/coin. E.g. Your low supply meme coin goes viral, and you don't want it to be 1,000$/coin so you mint and distribute more coins. But it is highly recommended to carefully set your supply at launch and disable this especially for meme coins.
Permanently disable transfer restrictions - If enabled, you can't set restrictions on the flow of your coin.
- For meme coins - Recommended
- For creator coins - Optional
AMM Config Section
Auction Duration The duration before the AMM goes live where buyers can submit bid orders to buy the coin.
- Give a minimum of 24hr to make sure it appears to people in all time zone & make the ending (the last 1hr) land in a suitable time for the time zone/s where most of your buyers reside. Because the real bidding starts at the last minute & If people are not going to be present at the last minute, they usually prefer not to bid at all.
Start price - This is the least price the AMM will start selling from, which will continue to increase (will have increasing price levels starting from this value).
- For meme coins - Meme coins should appear very cheap. A 1000$/coin is not psychologically attractive for a meme coin.
- For creator coins - Higher price gives the creator high perceived values, so can be a higher value.
Order spacing - We said that starting from the "**Start price" **the AMM will continue to increase the price, but it doesn't increase for every coin sold. It increases by phase (Once X amount of coins are sold). Will discuss this later.
The order spacing is the value that determines by how much the AMM price increases every time those X amount of coins are sold out. Taking Start price of 1$ & an order spacing of 10%, the first price level will be 1$, once X amount of coins are sold out, price increases by 10% to 1.1$ & then 1.11$... Each price level becomes Previous level + 10% of the previous level.- The default 10% is optimal for a steady growth unless for a specific reason.
Amount per level - By setting the Order spacing, we have made the price to constantly increase by x% once X amount of coins are all sold out.
Amount per level is that X amount (in dollar) that needs to be sold out to get to the next price level.
Assuming 100$ Amount per level, start price of 1$ and 10% Order spacing,- First price is 1$. Once 100$ worth of the coin are sold at this price (100$/1$= 100coins are sold out), The price is increased by 10% to 1.1$
- Second price is 1.1$. Once 100$ worth of the coin are sold at this price (100$/1.1$ = 91 coins are sold out), Price increases to **1.22$ **and so on.
Let's see the effect of the amount per level in different cases.- If we set very small amount per level, with just a little amount of buying we get to the next price level, so the price will move up quickly & falls too quickly with little sell
- If we set very high amount per level, the price become stagnant, even while there is a lot of buy pressure. Because at each price level, there is a large amount that needs to be sold before going to the next price level.
So, your goal while setting the amount per level is to get an optimal point that brings a steady growth while ensuring price stability. Which means we don't want the price to be stagnant (By making the amount per level too high, where even a million-dollar buying can't take the price anywhere), but we don't also want it to be too sensitive (By making the amount per level too low, where a 100$ buy/sell can bring the price 10x High or low).To identify this optimal amount per level, you need to predict the demand the token might receive. Do you expect millions of dollars to flow? set the amount per level to a higher value, may be a 1000$, so there will be a price increase every 1,000$ is bought insuring steady growth while ensuring price stability.
And this amount per level also relates to order spacing
- if you set very high amount per level and low order spacing, price is almost constant. Because even after a lot of buying, once the large amount at one price level is exhausted, the price is not increased by a lot because the order spacing is small.
- Or if you set too small amount per level and high order spacing, the amount on each price level can be exhausted so easily, and once it's exhausted & price level increases, the increases substantially. (Same for the opposite case, price falls quickly)Amount increase - Previously we saw that we have an amount that need to be sold at each level to go to the next price level. That amount was constant. But we can make it dynamic with this option.
Assuming an amount increases of 10% & 100$ amount per level
it takes 100$ of buying to go to the next price level.
On the next price-level the amount is increased to 110$, So 110$ will need to be bought to go to the next price level and so on.
So, price tend to move more and more slowly as more and more of the coin are bought (100$ buying can get us to next price level but letter we might need 1000$ buying to go to the next price level).
Which means, even with a low amount per level but high amount increase, the price will not move up and down quickly. (It may move up/down quickly initially but as we go up the amount per level is increased so the price is more of stable)\- The default 10% is optimal unless for a specific reason.
Enable Terminal Amount - This is the point where the amount increase will be disabled. It can be done at a specific price/amount. So, once that point is reached, it will disable the amount increase.
- Leave this default unless for a specific reason.
Final Price - Is the price where the AMM stops selling and the only market determines the price. If price falls back below the final price, AMM starts selling otherwise tokens may remain inside of it.
Quote currency - Set it to your buyers preference/Holdings
In this article Meme coins and Creator coins are treated differently due to their fundamental difference in their nature.
Creator coins the creator is the backbone of the token. The existence and growth of the token is associated to the creator's reputation. The creator may also be sharing their earnings through revenue sharing. They are the highest contributor to the token and deservers higher level of rights like owning the majority, higher trading fees and others that are mentioned above. Traders can also feel confident easily as it is unlikely for creators do anything harmful to their token that is directly associated with their own reputation.
Meme coins even though they may be created by a single person, they belong to the community and the creator has no critical role. So, for the community to have confidence in the coin, the creator should not have excessive rights over it.
Tips
- Start by setting your ownership percentage & other token properties.
- Update your configurations and see their effects in the preview tab > Token details & keep iterating until you see what you want.
- If you are not sure of what you are doing, leave permanent configurations.
- For tokens of high-value projects, consult experts as some of the configurations might be permanent.
AMM Coin Launches for Dummies 🚀
What is an AMM?
An Automated Market Maker (AMM) is a system that sets token prices and fills buy orders automatically. Instead of using traditional buyers and sellers like a stock market, an AMM uses a pricing formula and a pool of available tokens to handle trades.
When a new coin launches on focus, the AMM starts with a set amount of tokens at different price levels. Buyers place bids, and the AMM fills the highest bids first, giving buyers tokens from the cheapest available price levels.
How AMM Pricing Works on FOCUS
When a new coin launches, the AMM is configured with four key settings:
- Start Price: The lowest price at which tokens will be sold. (Example: $0.001)
- Price Increase %: How much the price increases per level. (Example: 10%)
- Final Price: The highest price at which tokens will be sold. (Example: $10.00)
- Total Tokens in AMM: The total supply of tokens available in the AMM. (Example: 97,000 tokens)
Example Scenario
AMM Price Levels Before Any Orders
We're Launching Dummies coin The AMM Settings are as follows:
Start Price: $0.60
Price Increase: 10% (to simplify well say this is just a flat 10c Increase)
Final Price: $1.00
Total Tokens in AMM: 5000
The AMM will create levels from the start price to the end price each one going up by the amount set in price increase. In this example there are 5 levels, so we distribute the total tokens in the AMM evenly between the 5 levels which gives us:
💰 $1.00 → 1,000 tokens
💰 $0.90 → 1,000 tokens
💰 $0.80 → 1,000 tokens
💰 $0.70 → 1,000 tokens
💰 $0.60 → 1,000 tokens
Total: 5,000 tokens in the AMM
How Bids Are Filled
Buyers place bids, and the AMM fills the highest bids first, pulling from the lowest available price upwards.
Let’s look at the order book for 4 buyers placing bids for this new token launch.
Username | Tokens bid on | price per token |
---|---|---|
Bob | 500 | $1.00 |
Alice | 1200 | $0.90 |
Charlie | 1500 | $0.85 |
Susan | 2000 | $0.75 |
Now let's see how the tokens in the AMM are distributed at launch
Bob's Order (500 tokens at $1.00)
✅ Bob places an order for 500 tokens at $1.00.
✅ The AMM fills his order at the cheapest available level ($0.60).
✅ Bob pays $1.00 per token, but the AMM only “sells” the tokens from the $0.60 price level.
📌 Bob pays: $500
📌 The AMM keeps: $200 profit (the use for this is still undecided by Nader)
📌 Remaining at $0.60: 500 tokens left
Alice’s Order (1,200 tokens at $0.90)
✅ Alice places an order for 1,200 tokens at $0.90.
✅ The AMM fills her order starting at $0.60 (500 tokens).
✅ Then, the AMM fills the rest (700 tokens) at $0.70.
📌 Alice pays: $1,080
📌 The AMM keeps: $360 profit
📌 Remaining at $0.70: 300 tokens left
Charlie’s Order (1,500 tokens at $0.85)
✅ Charlie places an order for 1,500 tokens at $0.85.
✅ The AMM fills his order starting at $0.70 (300 tokens).
✅ Then, the AMM fills 1,000 tokens at $0.80.
✅ Charlie still needs 200 more tokens, but there are no tokens left below $0.85.
📌 Charlie’s order is only partially filled with 1,300 tokens.
📌 Remaining at $0.80: 0 tokens left
Susan’s Order (2,000 tokens at $0.75)
❌ Susan places an order for 2,000 tokens at $0.75, but there are NO tokens left at $0.75 or lower.
❌ Her order is completely unfilled.
Key Takeaways
- The Highest Bids are filled from the cheapest price levels first.
- You must bid high enough to guarantee tokens but you’ll still get the lowest possible price.
- The AMM keeps the difference when buyers overpay (e.g., Bob paid $1.00 but got tokens at $0.60).
- If your bid is too low and tokens run out before reaching your price, your order won’t be filled.
Hi, thanks for the detailed explanation. I though I did understand the token sales auction but I miss totally a step. I hope that you can tell me what I do wrong so that I can learn this for the next time
Example of a launch:
The amm was
0.001 - 1k
0.0011 - 1k
0.00121 - 1k
0.001331 - 1k
0.001464 - 1k
0.001611 - 1 k
0.001772 - 1k
0.001949 - 1k
0.002144 - 1k
initial bids were
person a , 0.001 for 3K coins
person b, 0.011 for 1K
person c, 0.001256 for 6K
person d, 0.001946 for 3K
According to your description, my thoughts
I will bid with 0.002144 for 8k
There were no other bids so, With my highest bit , 0.002144, I can fill every previous level / sell from the AMM
But this was not happening
Results:
I got only 2k for a price of 0.002144.
What am I doing wrong because I do not get the picture at all. If you look at the recent sell trades of the AMM for user btcabi, most of them are for the price 0.0022
I do not get it at all
Thank you so much already !!
Thank you for such a clear explanation. This is such valuable and important information for new users and users who haven't been exposed to this type of system.
Thanks @imoliver, very helpfull. Does it work like that on openfund as well when you place a marketorder for focus or deso?
Good explanation
Thanks @imoliver , great explanation.
Please tell me if I am wrong. Unless your bid is right on spot and the pool is large enough, you always pay more than the real price of the coin at that moment or you can't buy all the coins you ordered. AMM always wins!
Hi, thanks for the detailed explanation. I though I did understand the token sales auction but I miss totally a step. I hope that you can tell me what I do wrong so that I can learn this for the next time
Example of a launch:
The amm was
0.001 - 1k
0.0011 - 1k
0.00121 - 1k
0.001331 - 1k
0.001464 - 1k
0.001611 - 1 k
0.001772 - 1k
0.001949 - 1k
0.002144 - 1k
initial bids were
person a , 0.001 for 3K coins
person b, 0.011 for 1K
person c, 0.001256 for 6K
person d, 0.001946 for 3K
According to your description, my thoughts
I will bid with 0.002144 for 8k
There were no other bids so, With my highest bit , 0.002144, I can fill every previous level / sell from the AMM
But this was not happening
Results:
I got only 2k for a price of 0.002144.
What am I doing wrong because I do not get the picture at all. If you look at the recent sell trades of the AMM for user btcabi, most of them are for the price 0.0022
I do not get it at all
Thank you so much already !!
Thank you for such a clear explanation. This is such valuable and important information for new users and users who haven't been exposed to this type of system.
Thanks @imoliver, very helpfull. Does it work like that on openfund as well when you place a marketorder for focus or deso?
Good explanation
Thanks @imoliver , great explanation.
Please tell me if I am wrong. Unless your bid is right on spot and the pool is large enough, you always pay more than the real price of the coin at that moment or you can't buy all the coins you ordered. AMM always wins!