Common Risks When Launching Projects

  • MEV Sandwich Attack: Attackers can monitor the public chain mempool and insert their buy and sell orders before and after user transactions, 'sandwiching' your transaction. For example, an MEV bot can buy before you and then sell after you, causing your transaction slippage to skyrocket while they achieve risk-free arbitrage.

  • Bot Front-Running: Some automated bots pay higher fees to seize the order of block packaging, thus completing transactions first. For example, when a user places a low-price order, a front-runner jumps the queue to place their transaction ahead, buying or selling first, causing the original transaction to fail or forcing it to endure poor pricing.

  • Address Tracking: All wallet addresses on the blockchain are public and transparent, and transaction records can be queried and analyzed. Once commonly used addresses are exposed, attackers can monitor fund flows, large transactions, etc. This means your holding behavior can become a target, leading to phishing, scams, or automated bots eyeing arbitrage.

Bundled Transactions and Privacy Swapping

  • Bundled Transactions: Executing multiple operations (such as creating tokens, initializing pools, layered positioning, etc.) in one or a group of atomic transactions. This ensures that either all steps succeed simultaneously, or all fail, eliminating opportunities for external interruption. Without bundling, step-by-step execution can easily be recognized and attacked by predictive algorithms, resulting in a low success rate. Bundled transactions can leverage private channels similar to Flashbots: for instance, Flashbots allow multiple transactions to be packed and sent directly to block producers via private channels, bypassing public transaction pools.

  • Privacy Swapping: Hiding key information or bypassing public broadcasting when submitting transactions. For example, using private transactions or relaying methods to send transactions directly to the block proposer instead of the public mempool. This way, MEV bots cannot see transaction details (such as amounts, token types, etc.) in advance, making it difficult for them to front-run. In fact, private transactions do not appear in the public mempool and are only publicly executed when packed; this effectively 'shields' your operations, preventing front-running or sandwich attacks.

Solution: CiaoTool Provides a One-Stop Solution

For project teams, CiaoTool offers a comprehensive on-chain token issuance and trading tool, allowing easy avoidance of the aforementioned risks. It is designed for Solana chain users, featuring a simple interface and comprehensive functions: users can 'issue tokens with one click' without writing contracts, and operations such as bulk transfers, airdrops, and liquidity deployment can be automated. Its bundled transaction feature is particularly powerful: it supports integration with platforms like Raydium and Pump, allowing multiple transaction processes (such as simultaneously creating tokens, layered pool building, pumping, etc.) to be completed with one click, thereby speeding up execution and ensuring atomicity. CiaoTool also allows for parameterized configuration of control ratios, slippage thresholds, etc. (for example, it is recommended that the control ratio be ≥95% of tokens when creating blocks), and enhances security by adding disguising transactions, delayed submissions, etc. More importantly, CiaoTool supports sending transactions to private execution channels, concealing the true transaction path similar to Flashbots. In summary, using CiaoTool, project launches can complete various operations within minutes, effectively resisting front-running and sandwich risks.

The Importance of Strategy Amid the Meme Coin Frenzy

Currently, Meme coins and PumpFun models are in vogue. Since the 4th quarter of 2024, batches of altcoins have emerged every few weeks, quickly driving sentiment through social media and communities. The barrier to issuing coins has significantly lowered — for instance, a set of CiaoTool tools allows you to 'launch your coin in minutes'. Meanwhile, there has been a surge in MEV front-running and sniping: data indicates that under the PumpSwap model on Solana in April 2025, over 68% of new tokens were sniped by MEV bots through bundled transactions within 300ms after migration. In this context, token issuance without security protection often ends up being 'fuel for retail investors'. Therefore, combining bundled transactions and privacy swapping strategies is particularly important. Utilizing the automated bundling features and private chain channels provided by CiaoTool can effectively cut off attack windows, protecting project teams and token holders from being sandwiched and cut off by market trends.

For more details, please visit the CiaoTool official website