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Primepad vs Others

Most launchpads stop at token creation or presale. Primepad treats liquidity, LP safety, community tooling, and growth rewards as part of the same product. The table below contrasts common patterns you see elsewhere with how Primepad is designed — not a claim about every competitor, but a useful mental model when you evaluate options.

Capability
Typical launchpad / DIY
Primepad

Token + DEX liquidity

Often separate deployers, pool UIs, or manual Uniswap steps

Single coordinated flow: deploy → V4 pool → add liquidity → lock LP

LP protection

Optional, off-platform, or left to the team to figure out

Default 1-year GoPlus lock on launched pairs (verify on-chain)

Community & social

Third-party bots, Zapier, or no standard offering

Native Telegram, X, and Molt agents; one configuration model

Agents without relaunching

N/A or unrelated to the launchpad

Buy agents for any token; 50% $PRIME discount if you launched on Primepad

Growth incentives

Ad-hoc marketing or nothing tied to verifiable traction

Market cap milestones with burns, promos, boosts, waived agent fees

Pricing clarity

Hidden fees, unclear post-launch costs, or fragmented vendor bills

Listed agent fees in $PRIME; milestone table in docs and on the main sitearrow-up-right

Automation

Manual follow-up for listings, announcements, and reward drops

Scenario-based automations for launch, listings, and campaigns (roadmap-dependent)

Stack age

Often V2-centric tooling or generic “token generator” flows

Built around Uniswap V4 and an agent-native control plane

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