OpenPR

Alt.fun Volume Bot Launches Non-Custodial HyperEVM Trending Engine

United Kingdom, 16th May 2026 – A purpose-built execution layer for Alt.fun on HyperEVM brings perp-aware order pausing, randomized multi-wallet fills, fresh per-campaign wallet rotation, and a single flat-fee economic model to launchpad operators trading perp-pegged tokens on Hyperliquid’s L1.

Alt.fun Volume Bot, accessible at www.altfunvolumebot.com, has opened general availability of a dedicated HyperEVM Volume Bot engine engineered specifically for the perp-backed coin model of the Alt.fun launchpad. The platform routes every order natively through the Alt.fun router on HyperEVM, reads the linked Hyperliquid perpetual futures contract before every fill, and pauses execution automatically when the underlying perp dislocates beyond a configurable threshold — the first volume engine to treat Alt.fun’s perp-pegged price discovery as a first-class input rather than an afterthought. The service is non-custodial: operator wallets sign locally over WalletConnect, and the campaign wallet pool is generated, funded, used, and destroyed inside a single campaign lifecycle.

Why Alt.fun’s Perp-Backed Model Required a Purpose-Built Engine

Alt.fun is not a bonding-curve launchpad. Tokens minted on the venue are anchored to linked Hyperliquid perpetual futures — typically three- or five-times leveraged exposure to HYPE, ETH, BTC, or an index — and price discovery on the coin tracks the underlying perp rather than emerging from an automated market maker. The economic consequence is direct: a volume tool ported from a generic AMM or bonding-curve launchpad cannot move price on an Alt.fun coin, because the peg holds price discovery on the perp side. What it can do is produce visibility — trade-tape density, Trending-feed placement, two-sided market signal, graduation-threshold momentum — and that is the surface this engine is designed for.

Generic AMM volume tools also mis-handle the structural pieces of HyperEVM execution. Bridging USDC or wrapping gas tokens to interact with the venue introduces latency, slippage, and counterparty surface that defeats the realism of the output. Alt.fun Volume Bot resolves this by operating as a native HyperEVM client: HYPE gas is auto-funded from the platform fee, USDC settlement happens on HyperEVM directly, and every swap is signed and submitted against the Alt.fun router with no proxy layer in between.

Perp-Aware Pause: Reading the Underlying Before Every Fill

The platform’s signature feature, shipped in version 1.42, is sub-block perp-aware pausing. Before each fill is constructed, the engine reads the price of the coin’s linked Hyperliquid perpetual contract. If the perp has dislocated from its expected band by more than the configured threshold — three percent by default, adjustable upward or downward in the advanced panel — the engine pauses fills, widens spreads, or skips the tick entirely. The behaviour serves two purposes: it prevents the volume bot from feeding slippage into a violent peg break, and it preserves tape realism, because human traders also slow down during dislocations. The reading happens at HyperEVM block-time resolution, with no off-chain estimation layer that could lag the venue.

Three Volume Profiles and the Architecture of Randomization

The engine ships with three preset volume profiles, each tuned for a different launch stage. Slow Build runs at a 40-to-90-second cadence with a wallet pool of 6 to 40 addresses and a 55/45 buy-bias, intended for long-tail visibility over days or weeks. Active Trending, the most-used preset, runs at 10-to-25-second intervals across 40 to 500 wallets with a 62/38 buy-skew, designed to push a coin into Alt.fun’s Trending feed and hold the placement during announcement or news windows. Power Surge operates at a 3-to-9-second cadence across up to 10,000 wallets with a balanced 50/50 ratio that reads as a two-sided contested market, intended for the final hours before graduation thresholds when visible density is the dominant input.

Inside every profile, three parameters are randomized on each fill: wallet selection from the rotation pool, ticket size drawn from a uniform distribution within profile-bound ranges, and the inter-fill interval drawn from a per-fill jitter range of up to ±60 percent. Buy and sell ticket bands are deliberately asymmetric — buys span roughly thirty to one hundred sixty percent of campaign average, sells twenty-two to one hundred twenty percent — because real-market sell flow clusters more tightly than buy flow. A ±4 percent natural wobble applies to the buy/sell ratio across the session so the tape does not sit on a perfect ratio. Every eight to twenty fills, the engine inserts a 30-to-120-second idle micro-pause: a calibrated simulation of a real trader stepping away from a screen, and a defence against the metronome signature that detection heuristics watch for.

Wallet Rotation, Local Custody, and Hygiene Against Cluster Analysis

Campaign wallets are generated fresh at launch, never reused across campaigns, and burned down at session end — dust is swept, balances are zeroed, and the addresses are retired. The pool ceiling is ten thousand unique wallets per campaign on Power Surge; the default depth scales automatically with volume target and selected profile. Because no wallet persists across runs, on-chain forensic tools that rely on cluster analysis — grouping addresses by shared transaction graphs across multiple sessions — have no signal to lock onto.

Operator key custody is strict. Private keys for the operator wallet never leave the operator’s environment: signing is handled locally over the EIP-1193 standard via WalletConnect, and the platform’s stated commitment is that no seed phrase or private key is ever requested, transmitted, or stored. Campaign wallet keys live in engine runtime memory only for the duration of an active session and are destroyed at completion. Every fill is verifiable on-chain through standard Hyperliquid block explorers, and the dashboard records per-fill timestamps, sizes, gas costs, and slippage for the operator’s own audit trail.

One Flat 2% Fee Covers Gas, RPC, Wallet Rotation, and Analytics

Pricing is structured as a single flat commission of two percent on target campaign volume, with a minimum of ten thousand US dollars per campaign (a two-hundred-dollar fee) and a maximum of one million dollars (a twenty-thousand-dollar fee). The commission is genuinely all-inclusive: it covers HYPE gas across the wallet rotation, dedicated RPC bandwidth, the fresh-wallet generation and burn-down lifecycle, dashboard telemetry, and the analytics layer. There are no subscription tiers, no per-wallet markups, no priority-gas surcharges, no setup fees, and no rebate or kickback structures that obscure the real cost of a campaign. Settlement happens in USDC on HyperEVM at campaign launch — a single payment, signed once, against a fresh receiving address selected from a rotating pool of payment endpoints.

Scheduling, Multi-Token Queues, and Dashboard Control

Campaigns can be launched immediately or scheduled to begin at any future date and time in UTC, with past timestamps rejected at submission. The scheduling layer normalises all input to UTC at storage time and resolves to the operator’s display locale on render, preventing the timezone-mismatch failure mode where a campaign starts hours earlier or later than the operator intended. Multi-token campaign queues, introduced in version 1.30, let an operator stage several Alt.fun coins under a single dashboard session. Every parameter — profile selection, target volume, duration, buy/sell skew, interval jitter override, perp-pause threshold, wallet pool depth, micro-pause toggle, private-RPC submission for large fills — is configurable from the dashboard with a live preview that recalculates the projected fill count and per-hour burn rate before the operator commits.

Why the Bot Cannot Move Price, and Why That Is the Point

The platform is explicit in its operator documentation that an Alt.fun coin’s price is anchored to its linked Hyperliquid perp, and that no volume tool — its own included — can override that peg. The deliverable is not a price pump but a visibility profile: a coin that consistently shows two-sided flow, holds Trending-feed placement long enough for an announcement to land, crosses graduation thresholds with the visible density other traders expect, and reads as a community-active token rather than an empty book. By collapsing perp-aware logic, native HyperEVM routing, fresh-wallet hygiene, and a single flat fee into one execution layer, Alt.fun Volume Bot reframes the volume-bot category around honest deliverables — visibility, tape realism, and Trending mechanics — rather than the impossible promise of moving a perp-pegged price.

Context for the HyperEVM Launchpad Category

HyperEVM, the EVM-compatible execution layer of Hyperliquid’s L1, has emerged as the highest-throughput venue for perp-backed memecoin and utility-coin launches, with Alt.fun positioned as the dominant launchpad on the chain. Tooling for the venue has lagged its growth: most volume bots in market were retrofitted from Solana or Ethereum stacks that treat price as the deliverable and ignore the structural reality of perp pegging. The launch of a Hyperliquid Volume Bot built around Alt.fun’s actual mechanics — rather than against them — closes that gap and gives launchpad operators an execution layer designed for the venue they are actually running on, available at www.altfunvolumebot.com.

Company Details

Organization: Alt.fun Volume Bot

Contact Person: Kimberly Rose

Website: https://www.altfunvolumebot.com/

Email: Send Email

Country: United Kingdom

Release Id: 16052645133

Disclaimer: This release is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice. Users are responsible for ensuring compliance with applicable laws and platform policies before using any described tools or services.