- Pump.fun launched a $3M build-in-public hackathon through its new Pump Fund.
- Twelve teams receive funding, but market traction decides success, not judges.
- The experiment favors speed, transparency, and token-driven feedback over VC norms.
Pump.fun is testing a very unconventional idea with the launch of Pump Fund, its new investment arm, by turning funding into a live market experiment. Instead of pitch decks and closed-door judges, the platform is running a $3 million “Build in Public” hackathon where builders are forced into the open. Twelve teams will each receive $250,000 at a $10 million valuation, but success isn’t decided by venture partners — it’s decided by the market.

Let the Token Decide
The core twist is simple and slightly unhinged. Teams are encouraged to launch tokens as part of their project and let real demand act as the signal. There’s no formal judging panel. If people care, engage, and trade, the project survives. If not, it fades. Founders must keep at least 10% of their token supply, aligning them with whatever outcome the market delivers. It’s raw, immediate feedback — and there’s no hiding behind polished slides.
Radical Transparency Is Mandatory
Pump.fun isn’t just asking teams to ship fast, it’s asking them to narrate the process in real time. Founders are expected to post frequent public updates across social platforms, streams, or community chats. Progress, setbacks, pivots — all of it happens in front of everyone. Submissions close on February 18, 2026, with outcomes announced roughly 30 days later. In this model, visibility is not optional, it’s the product.

Signal, Hype, or Something in Between
Whether this works depends on what you think good early-stage signals look like. Pump.fun is clearly betting that traction, attention, and token participation reveal more truth than committee debates ever could. Critics will argue this rewards hype and velocity over durability. Supporters will say that real users voting with capital is the cleanest signal there is. Both can be true at once, which is kind of the point.
Why This Will Be Hard to Ignore
This isn’t a safe or tidy experiment. It’s chaotic by design. Pump.fun is effectively pouring fuel on the builder ecosystem and watching what catches. For founders, it’s an opportunity to skip gatekeepers and go straight to the crowd. For observers, it’s a stress test of whether markets can meaningfully replace early-stage venture judgment. Either way, it’s going to be loud, messy, and very hard to look away from.











