
Token Forge December 2025 Update
Token Forge is pleased to announce its most substantial platform update since launch. The December 2025 update introduces advanced presale mechanisms, expanded liquidity infrastructure, professional grade trading tools, and powerful new creator controls. Together, these upgrades significantly improve how tokens are launched, discovered, traded, and managed across the Base onchain ecosystem. This update focuses on flexibility, transparency, and long term sustainability for both builders and pa...

How to launch your token with Token Forge
Launch your token with Token ForgeGo from an idea to a live token on Base in a few minutes. The wizard is simple to use, fill a form, click Next, and keep going until Deploy. Whenever you see a little light‑bulb next to a field, click it for a short, in‑context explanation.Before you startMake sure your wallet is setup for Base. Connect your wallet to the Token Forge, keep a little ETH for gas, and have enough PBTC for the platform fees and, if you’re skipping a presale, seeding liquidity. Pr...

Welcome to the Forge Academy
Welcome to the Forge AcademyCrypto can feel overwhelming. Tokens, liquidity pools, market caps, scams — there’s a lot to take in. Most people either dive in blindly and get burned, or never take the leap at all. The Forge Academy exists to change that.What is the Forge Academy?The Forge Academy is the educational hub of the Token Forge on Base. It’s a place where anyone — whether you’re launching a token, trading for the first time, or simply trying to understand how onchain culture works — c...
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Token Forge December 2025 Update
Token Forge is pleased to announce its most substantial platform update since launch. The December 2025 update introduces advanced presale mechanisms, expanded liquidity infrastructure, professional grade trading tools, and powerful new creator controls. Together, these upgrades significantly improve how tokens are launched, discovered, traded, and managed across the Base onchain ecosystem. This update focuses on flexibility, transparency, and long term sustainability for both builders and pa...

How to launch your token with Token Forge
Launch your token with Token ForgeGo from an idea to a live token on Base in a few minutes. The wizard is simple to use, fill a form, click Next, and keep going until Deploy. Whenever you see a little light‑bulb next to a field, click it for a short, in‑context explanation.Before you startMake sure your wallet is setup for Base. Connect your wallet to the Token Forge, keep a little ETH for gas, and have enough PBTC for the platform fees and, if you’re skipping a presale, seeding liquidity. Pr...

Welcome to the Forge Academy
Welcome to the Forge AcademyCrypto can feel overwhelming. Tokens, liquidity pools, market caps, scams — there’s a lot to take in. Most people either dive in blindly and get burned, or never take the leap at all. The Forge Academy exists to change that.What is the Forge Academy?The Forge Academy is the educational hub of the Token Forge on Base. It’s a place where anyone — whether you’re launching a token, trading for the first time, or simply trying to understand how onchain culture works — c...
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When people first look at tokens, they often focus on the price. “This coin is only a fraction of a cent, it could 100x!” But price alone doesn’t tell the full story. What really matters is market cap.
This guide explains the difference between market cap and price, why market cap usually matters more, and how to think about both when looking at tokens.
Definition: The amount of money you need to buy a single token.
Price can be:
High (like ETH trading at thousands of dollars).
Low (like meme tokens trading at fractions of a cent).
Why it matters: Price shapes perception. A low price can feel “cheap” and attractive to newcomers. A high price can feel exclusive or premium.
Limitations: Price alone doesn’t account for how many tokens exist. A token could cost $0.01, but if there are trillions of tokens, it may still have a massive valuation.

Formula: Market Cap = Token Price × Circulating Supply
Example:
Token A costs $1 and has 1 billion tokens → Market Cap = $1 billion.
Token B costs $0.01 and has 100 billion tokens → Market Cap = $1 billion.
Even though Token B looks “cheaper” at one cent, both projects have the same overall value.
Why it matters: Market cap shows the scale of a project. It’s the best way to compare tokens fairly, regardless of individual price.
• Circulating Supply: Tokens available and trading right now.
• Total Supply: The maximum number of tokens that will ever exist.
A project might have a small circulating supply today but mint more over time. That means market cap could expand dramatically even if the price per token stays the same.
Fair comparisons: Market cap lets you compare two projects directly.
Price illusions: Low price per token does not equal growth potential.
Community scale: Market cap reflects how much value the community has given a project overall.

Price does still play a role:
Unit bias: People prefer buying thousands of tokens instead of fractions.
Accessibility: Very high-priced tokens can feel out of reach.
Psychology: Newcomers are often drawn to low prices without realizing supply dynamics.
When evaluating tokens:
Look at market cap first to understand the project’s scale.
Use price to think about accessibility and community psychology.
Always check supply details (circulating vs total) for context.
Price gets attention, but market cap tells the truth. A token that costs one cent can be “bigger” than a token that costs one hundred dollars if the supply is massive.
If you’re creating or joining a token community, keep market cap in mind before getting distracted by flashy low prices. Tools like the Token Forge on Base help new builders design fair supply and distribution models so that market cap and price make sense together from day one.

When people first look at tokens, they often focus on the price. “This coin is only a fraction of a cent, it could 100x!” But price alone doesn’t tell the full story. What really matters is market cap.
This guide explains the difference between market cap and price, why market cap usually matters more, and how to think about both when looking at tokens.
Definition: The amount of money you need to buy a single token.
Price can be:
High (like ETH trading at thousands of dollars).
Low (like meme tokens trading at fractions of a cent).
Why it matters: Price shapes perception. A low price can feel “cheap” and attractive to newcomers. A high price can feel exclusive or premium.
Limitations: Price alone doesn’t account for how many tokens exist. A token could cost $0.01, but if there are trillions of tokens, it may still have a massive valuation.

Formula: Market Cap = Token Price × Circulating Supply
Example:
Token A costs $1 and has 1 billion tokens → Market Cap = $1 billion.
Token B costs $0.01 and has 100 billion tokens → Market Cap = $1 billion.
Even though Token B looks “cheaper” at one cent, both projects have the same overall value.
Why it matters: Market cap shows the scale of a project. It’s the best way to compare tokens fairly, regardless of individual price.
• Circulating Supply: Tokens available and trading right now.
• Total Supply: The maximum number of tokens that will ever exist.
A project might have a small circulating supply today but mint more over time. That means market cap could expand dramatically even if the price per token stays the same.
Fair comparisons: Market cap lets you compare two projects directly.
Price illusions: Low price per token does not equal growth potential.
Community scale: Market cap reflects how much value the community has given a project overall.

Price does still play a role:
Unit bias: People prefer buying thousands of tokens instead of fractions.
Accessibility: Very high-priced tokens can feel out of reach.
Psychology: Newcomers are often drawn to low prices without realizing supply dynamics.
When evaluating tokens:
Look at market cap first to understand the project’s scale.
Use price to think about accessibility and community psychology.
Always check supply details (circulating vs total) for context.
Price gets attention, but market cap tells the truth. A token that costs one cent can be “bigger” than a token that costs one hundred dollars if the supply is massive.
If you’re creating or joining a token community, keep market cap in mind before getting distracted by flashy low prices. Tools like the Token Forge on Base help new builders design fair supply and distribution models so that market cap and price make sense together from day one.
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