12Terms

Glossary

Crypto launchpads use words that can hide complexity. This glossary explains the terms users will see on ReBelieve token pages and creator flows.

The goal is not to turn every participant into a protocol engineer. The goal is to make the interface easier to read, so users can understand what the product is telling them.

These definitions describe how the terms are used inside ReBelieve. External protocols may use similar words slightly differently.

Launch terms

Bonding curve: an automated market that prices tokens based on reserves instead of an order book.

Graduation: the moment a launch reaches its target and moves toward external DEX liquidity.

Migration: the chain-specific process that creates or connects the post-bonding liquidity pool.

Quote asset: the asset used to buy the token during bonding, such as SOL or ETH.

Reserve: tokens and quote assets held by the curve or migration process.

Economic terms

Creator fee: the creator side of the trading fee.

Platform fee: the ReBelieve side of the trading fee.

Creator Supply: an optional creator purchase shown separately from normal user buys.

Vesting: a lock schedule that releases tokens over time rather than immediately.

Buyback and burn: a mechanism that uses a configured fee share to buy the token and burn the purchased amount.

Growth terms

Affiliate code: a normalized referral code attached to a ReBelieve referral link.

Referral attribution: the one-time link between a referred user and the affiliate who brought them in.

Tracked volume: trading volume generated by referred creator activity and used to estimate affiliate rewards.

Claimable affiliate rewards: unpaid affiliate rewards that can be requested through the dashboard.

Risk terms

Slippage: the difference between expected execution and final execution.

Liquidity: how easily a token can be bought or sold without large price movement.

Market cap: token price multiplied by supply. It is a signal, not a guarantee of liquidity.

Holder count: the number of wallets holding the token. It can be useful, but it does not prove demand quality.

Migration error: a state where graduation was reached but the DEX migration needs attention or verification.