Pick.trade says it launched a new Solana platform that bundles trading charts and execution with social features and token-launch tooling inside one interface, aiming to reduce constant app-hopping across the Solana ecosystem. The launch was announced in a Chainwire release that positions the product as a unified workflow for analysis, trading, and creator distribution on Solana.
The core pitch is simple: a token page should not just be a chart. In Pick.trade’s launch write-up, each token page can include integrated video live streaming and chat, so trading, commentary, and community activity happen in the same place, not across separate tabs and apps.
Solana trading is fragmented by design.
In practice, traders split their workflow across multiple tools: one for discovery, one for charts, one for execution, and separate venues for token launches. Pick.trade is betting that a credible “single tab” interface can win attention if it ships fast, stays reliable under load, and nails the most valuable loops.
Those loops are:
If Pick.trade can compress those loops into one UX, it can change how attention and liquidity flow through Solana’s fast-moving token cycles.
Pick.trade’s announcement says it supports integrated video live streams directly on token pages, with creators and KOLs able to broadcast commentary alongside a live trading context. The company positions this as “industry-first” social integration for Solana trading.
The Pick.trade documentation also describes live streams as free and available for any Solana token page, with navigation that lets users browse multiple streams on the site. The same docs describe a token-page chat system where anyone can participate and where token creators can delete messages, ban users, and assign moderators to manage spam and abuse. That functionality is described in the docs pages for Video Live-Streams and Chat and Moderation.
Pick.trade is also leaning into a “trading as a game” retention model.
In the launch announcement, the platform describes XP and leveling where actions like placing trades or watching streams earn progression, and rewards can include $PICK tokens, avatar items, and fee cashback. That same direction is reinforced in Pick.trade’s documentation on incentives, which says rewards can be driven by levels, contests, and airdrops and are connected to $PICK token mechanics. The incentives approach is described on the docs page for Incentives.
Instead of adding another standalone launchpad, Pick.trade says it acts as a launchpad aggregator, where token creators select an existing Solana launchpad and Pick.trade handles the deployment flow inside its interface.
In its documentation, Pick.trade lists current support for launchpads like PumpFun, LetsBonk, Boop, Believe App, Moonit, and Moonshot as part of the aggregator approach. It also positions the platform as a hub where any Solana token can be traded, streamed, and discussed, even if the token was not created through Pick.trade. Those claims appear in the docs pages for Ultimate Launchpad and Launchpad Aggregator.
From a market-structure perspective, an aggregator model is a direct attempt to avoid splitting liquidity and creator tooling across yet another silo. If it works, creators get distribution and tooling without having to pick a single “one true” launch venue.
Pick.trade’s documentation describes two discovery surfaces that map closely to how Solana token cycles actually work.
On execution, Pick.trade also describes adjustable presets designed for different market conditions, including “normal,” “speed,” “turbo,” and an “auto” mode that chooses a preset based on conditions. Those presets are described in Adjustable Settings.
Pick.trade’s documentation says users create an account with a Phantom wallet or email and can trade without signing each transaction after funding the account with SOL. The same page references a debit and credit card on-ramp via Transak. That flow is described in Pick.trade’s How It Works documentation.
This matters because “no signing per trade” implies a different permission or custody model than typical wallet-to-DEX flows.
For readers assessing risk, the practical takeaway is to confirm what actually holds funds between trades, what permissions are granted, how withdrawals work, and what security controls exist for account access.
On fees, Pick.trade’s documentation describes a 0.8% transaction fee for operations that require signing, with a minimum fee of 0.001 SOL, and notes that some actions like starting streams or moderating chat do not incur transaction fees. That fee model is described in the docs page on Fees.
Pick.trade’s documentation describes $PICK as the platform’s official token and calls it deflationary, with buybacks and burns funded through a treasury. It also says platform features remain free and do not require holding $PICK. Those points are described in the docs page for the $PICK Official Token.
For readers, the key thing to separate is utility versus incentives.
A platform can be useful without requiring token holding. At the same time, incentives can materially change user behavior by pulling activity into the product during growth pushes.
Pick.trade is trying to fuse three high-attention Solana primitives into one place: trading execution, social distribution, and token launch tooling.
If the platform delivers a reliable “single tab” workflow with strong moderation and a clear security model, it can become a meaningful attention surface for Solana trading. If streaming and chat turn into an unmoderated scam layer, or if the execution model introduces trust assumptions users do not understand, adoption will stall even if the product is flashy.
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