You know what's interesting about Resolve?
It could change how people think about buying tokens on https://t.co/sDybFdaegU.
Imagine you buy a token, but you're not sure it'll survive.
Instead of just holding and hoping, you borrow SOL against it.
If the token is still alive after 7 days, repay the loan and get your tokens back.
If it dies, you already have the SOL you borrowed.
Damn... someone had a fat bag.
Just to clear things up before the rumors start:
I never had any tokens. Not in the dev wallet, not in another wallet, nowhere.
I'm relying on creator rewards only.
Still building. Nothing changes.
Next up: Staking.
Once staking goes live, every core part of Resolve Protocol will be fully functional.
From there, it's all about improving the protocol, adding new features, refining the experience, and continuing to build over time.
All borrows that got stuck have now been fully refunded.
For future borrows, please don't close or refresh the page until you see "Transaction successfully completed."
The transaction needs to be fully confirmed before leaving the page.
One of the coolest things about Resolve is the flexibility it gives buyers.
Imagine a token has built up enough borrowing liquidity.
• Buy a token with 1 SOL.
• Lock it as collateral and borrow 1 SOL.
• Now you have your SOL back while your tokens stay locked.
If the project starts doing well and you want to keep your position, just repay the loan anytime within 7 days and unlock the exact same amount of tokens.
The more I build Resolve, the more I realize it solves a lot of problems on @Pumpfun .
Once you understand how the protocol works, the benefits become pretty obvious. I'll keep breaking them down over time.
Also, I'd love to see people start launching tokens on Resolve.
The launch feature is open to everyone, and launching with built-in borrowing gives buyers another reason to have confidence in your token from day one.
Everything is working exactly as intended.
I've tested the full borrowing flow multiple times:
✅ Borrow
✅ Repay
✅ Unlock collateral
You can repay your loan at any time. The 10% interest is fixed, and the 7 days is simply the maximum repayment period, not a lock.
Borrow early, repay whenever you want within the 7-day window, and get your tokens back.
If you're borrowing SOL, please don't close or refresh the page until you see "Transaction successfully completed."
Closing the page early may interrupt the process before it's fully confirmed on-chain.
Thanks!
Borrowing against $RSV is now live.
Initial limits:
• Max Borrow: 0.25 SOL per user
• Collateral Ratio: 200%
• Interest: 10%
• Repayment Period: 7 Days
The borrow limit will increase as the token grows and the liquidity pool expands.
Pushing the borrowing update live soon.
Just fixing one last thing with Phantom.
Since Resolve is a new domain, Phantom may show a risk warning when connecting your wallet. We're working on getting that cleared so the experience is smoother.
Almost there.
I'll be providing the initial borrowing liquidity in the next 1–2 hours.
Around $500–900 will be available to start.
From there, the pool is designed to grow automatically.
Every token launched through Resolve enters hourly cycles:
Creator rewards are claimed every hour.
Rewards are converted to SOL.
SOL is added to the borrowing pool.
More liquidity becomes available to borrow against supported tokens.
It starts small, but it's built to compound over time.
Calling Pumpad a rug is crazy.
It reached a ~$600k market cap and traded for over 2 months with continuous updates. The chart is public.
And if I remember correctly, you were the same person asking us for SOL to shill it.
Yes, we built Pumpad, and we're proud of it.
I'd rather stand behind a project that kept shipping for months than the countless tokens that get promoted by you then abandoned, and disappear within hours.
I don't get why the default reaction is always "scam" or "LARP" instead of actually looking at how something works.
The GitHub is public.
The protocol flow is public.
We're not promising infinite liquidity or some unrealistic APY. The design is actually pretty straightforward and, at least in my view, internally consistent.
If you think it doesn't work, point out where the logic breaks.
A lot of people seem to expect to borrow 1,000 SOL the first hour after launch. That's never been the idea.
The pool is designed to grow over time. The more the protocol is used, the more liquidity it accumulates.
Not really.
The liquidity isn't coming from a fixed treasury—it's continuously replenished by creator rewards.
If borrowers repay, the pool gets back the principal plus 10% interest in SOL, making it larger.
If they don't repay, the collateraled tokens are moved to the staking pool instead of being sold.
More staking → stronger holder incentives → more trading activity → more creator rewards → a larger borrowing pool.
The idea is to create a cycle where the protocol keeps strengthening over time.