In 2010, Gavin Andresen built the first Bitcoin faucet.
You visited a website, solved a captcha, and received 5 BTC for free.
No account. No ID. No strings.
The goal was simple: get real coins into real hands so people could actually use the network.
Seeing the faucet balance go down a little bit faster than I'd like here so I'm going to make the claim limit every 2 hours instead of 1 hour so we can remain sustainable.
Again, this can always be adjusted as we go.
The $FAUCET stays on!
The goal here is to make Solana, pump fun, and crypto in general an accessible piece of technology just as the creator of the original Bitcoin Faucet intended for Bitcoin.
Simplicity is the name of the game.
$FAUCET
Adoption was always the goal for cryptocurrency, the original Bitcoin Faucet played a big role in that.
I want to carry the torch and encourage mass adoption of Solana.
@RAIZ_75@DeltaXtc This is indeed someone we had in mind.
I may be biased but I truly do think this could be something Solana officially supports in the future.
🔐 Just locked 15,270,000 $FAUCET tokens with @Streamflow_Fi
It's on-chain. You can check the amount, time-period and recipients.
Check it out👇
https://t.co/vrtfTc2Kgf
Support the project by purchasing the $FAUCET token: 7T7eDKbbjquZGeSjKdM8cjx67YsvpyTD5wTiUwLhpump
Use the faucet: https://t.co/YblVwunLSr
This is the end of the thread.
In 2010, Gavin Andresen built the first Bitcoin faucet.
You visited a website, solved a captcha, and received 5 BTC for free.
No account. No ID. No strings.
The goal was simple: get real coins into real hands so people could actually use the network.
Gavin's original faucet ran until it became too expensive to give away coins that were suddenly worth real money.
This one is designed to scale with its own funding source.
The goal is the same: lower the barrier to entry and let people experience Solana firsthand.