DEXTools Launches Social Boost Pilot With $2,000 Daily Commitment for Winning Community Token Buys
— By Tony Rabbit in News

DEXTools has launched Social Boost, a two-week pilot that pools social update fees, guarantees at least $2,000 per day and buys the token with the most verified unique visits.
DEXTools has announced the launch of Social Boost, a new two-week pilot designed to push value back into the communities that drive attention across the platform instead of treating that attention as a one-way monetization funnel. Under the model, fees from social updates are pooled daily and used to buy the token that wins the most verified unique visits.
The announcement is framed as a direct response to a trust problem that many DeFi users feel has become structural rather than cyclical. In its published message, the DEXTools team says the ecosystem is dealing with more than normal market fatigue: communities are exhausted by extractive launches, short-term influencer behavior and attention models that take from users without giving much back.
That is the core pitch behind DEXTools Social Boost. Instead of selling exposure alone, the platform says it wants to test a mechanism where project promotion, community participation and market support are tied together in a visible daily loop.
How DEXTools says Social Boost works
Projects that purchase a social update on DEXTools automatically enter a daily competition. All update fees collected during that day are pooled together, and the token with the most verified unique visits by the end of the round wins. The full amount is then used to execute an open market buy of that token.
DEXTools says the buy will happen at a random point during the day rather than at a fixed hour. The stated reason is simple: a predictable timestamp would make the mechanism easier to front-run. By randomizing execution, the platform says it is trying to protect the integrity of each daily buy.
At the end of every day, DEXTools says it will publish the winner, the amount bought and the related onchain transaction. That public reporting layer is important because Social Boost only works if communities can see that the result was real and not just a marketing claim.
Who can participate and how a project wins
For projects, the path is straightforward: purchase a social update and enter the competition. For communities, the lever is attention. Visiting the token page and sharing it is what counts toward that day’s result, as long as those visits pass the platform’s verification rules.
DEXTools also says there are no premium competition tiers layered on top of the mechanic. A smaller but highly engaged community can beat a larger passive one if it drives more real verified visits. In practice, that means Social Boost is trying to turn attention quality into the deciding variable instead of pure budget size.
What about bots, fake visits and treasury handling?
DEXTools says the pilot will use IP deduplication, device fingerprinting and minimum time-on-page requirements to filter invalid traffic. The company also says attempts to artificially inflate visit numbers may lead to disqualification. It adds that the system may not be perfect on day one, but that it will continue refining the model and remain transparent about changes.
The platform also addressed what happens after the daily buy. According to the announcement, the purchased tokens will go into the DEXTools treasury and are not intended to be sold back into the market. The team says those holdings may later support future campaigns or larger prize structures, but that the pilot is not being presented as a treasury accumulation program that later dumps winners.
The two-week pilot and the $2,000 daily floor
DEXTools says Social Boost is launching as a two-week pilot. The company describes that as intentional: it wants to prove the mechanism works before presenting it as a permanent feature. At the same time, the team says its long-term intention is to keep building on the principle if the community responds well.
The most aggressive part of the announcement is the funding guarantee. DEXTools says that for the entire pilot period it will commit $2,000 per day regardless of how many projects participate. If social update fees do not reach that amount, the team says it will cover the difference itself. That means every day of the pilot is expected to send at least that amount into the winning token’s market.
The announcement also hints that if Social Boost does not get the response DEXTools wants, the team already has a backup concept in mind built around the same principle of giving value back to communities. No details were shared, but the message was clear: the platform wants this launch to be read as an opening move, not a one-off stunt.
Final take
Social Boost is one of the clearest attempts DEXTools has made to turn community attention into a measurable, onchain outcome. The model is simple enough for users to understand quickly, but specific enough that it can be judged publicly day by day.
The success or failure of the pilot will come down to three things: whether communities actually participate, whether the visit verification holds up under pressure and whether DEXTools follows through on transparent reporting. If it does, Social Boost could become a more credible template for community-linked token promotion than a standard paid slot. If it does not, the market will know quickly.