How to Snipe TON Memecoins with Not.Trade (2026 Guide)
— By Tony Rabbit in Tutorials

Step-by-step TON memecoin sniping with Not.Trade Memescope, multi-wallet setup, insider safety checks, MEV protection, and MCAP-trigger exits.
How to Snipe TON Memecoins with Not.Trade in 2026
Sniping a TON memecoin in 2026 looks nothing like sniping on Solana or any EVM chain. The mempool behaves differently, finality lands in seconds, gas is measured in fractions of a cent, and most early launches happen inside Telegram before they surface on a public scanner. Treat TON like a clone of another chain and you will lose money to honeypots, dev dumps, and bundler walls before your second click.
This tutorial walks through the exact workflow we use to snipe new jettons on TON with Not.Trade, the fastest TON-native terminal. You will learn how to set up a TON Connect wallet, configure multi-wallet sniping, find launches in the Memescope New Pairs column with the NEWEST filter, run the insider safety panel as a pre-buy checklist, set MEV protection and slippage, place the snipe, and exit using market-cap triggered limit sells. Real tokens like UTYA, MTONGA, TONTOPIA, INTERN, $80, and TSHIB anchor every step.
Why now? TON memecoin volume has climbed since the Telegram Stars integration broadened, and the supply of fresh launches per day on STON.fi and DeDust is large enough that a disciplined sniper sees several real opportunities every session. The edge is no longer about being first to the chain. The edge is being first with a clean safety read, sized correctly, with a pre-loaded exit.
Featured Snippet
Sniping a TON memecoin in 2026 starts by setting up a TON Connect wallet on Not.Trade, funding it with TON for gas and the purchase, then watching the Memescope New Pairs column filtered to NEWEST. Before buying, verify the token insider safety panel: Top 10 holders under twenty-five percent, no dev wallet sells, LP locked. Submit the buy with MEV protection ON and slippage set conservatively, then immediately layer an MCAP-triggered limit sell order to protect gains while the chart still moves.
What TON Memecoin Sniping Actually Means
A snipe, in the TON memecoin context, is buying a jetton within minutes (often seconds) of its trading pair going live on STON.fi or DeDust. Most TON memecoins follow a sharp curve where early buyers ride from a few hundred dollars of market cap to whatever peak the meme generates, then exit while later buyers absorb the unwind. If you are not in within the first few price impressions, the curve has usually extended past the favorable risk/reward zone.
Sniping is not buying every new token. It is a probability game: scan, filter, safety check, size small, enter, exit by a pre-defined rule. Most snipes do not become moonshots. A good sniper accepts that the median snipe goes flat or down, and the strategy survives because the upside outliers (think INTERN running from $7.91K market cap to repeated daily highs) pay for the noise.
Why TON Sniping Is Different from Solana
People come to TON expecting Solana mechanics and get punished. The chain looks fast, the tokens look familiar, but the underlying behaviour is different in ways that change how you snipe. Understanding the differences is what keeps your bankroll alive long enough to learn the rest.
The jetton standard is the biggest practical difference. Because every holder has their own jetton wallet contract, a snipe transaction touches more than one smart contract and consumes more gas than a typical Solana SPL trade. You do not feel it because gas is cheap, but transaction simulation matters, and that is what Not.Trade handles in the background when you click buy.
The MEV picture also differs. Classic sandwich attacks are less common on TON than on Ethereum or Solana, but bundler bots that buy a large fraction of supply in the first block (and then unload onto retail) are very common. Your safety check needs to weight bundler concentration heavily, and Not.Trade exposes a dedicated BUNDLERS badge for exactly this.
Finally, alpha distribution is Telegram-native. New TON memecoins are first discussed in Telegram channels, often before the trading pair is live. Good because Not.Trade runs in Telegram, so reaction time is short. Bad because Telegram is where the worst rug-pull marketing happens. Never buy because a Telegram message said to. Buy because Memescope shows it, your safety check passes, and the chart structure supports it.
Tools You Need Before You Snipe
Sniping with a half-set-up stack will cost you the first few opportunities. Get these in place before you ever open Memescope hunting for a snipe.
Wallet
Tonkeeper or MyTonWallet, connected via TON Connect. Burner wallet recommended for sniping, kept separate from your main TON holdings.
Terminal
Not.Trade web + Telegram bot. Memescope is the discovery surface, Tracker is post-buy monitoring, Portfolio aggregates positions.
TON Float
Enough TON for trade size plus gas across all sniping wallets. Top up via centralized exchange or bridge before the session.
Alpha Feeds
A short, curated list of TON Telegram channels you actually trust, plus on-chain watchers for STON.fi and DeDust pool creations.
A note on wallet hygiene: use a dedicated sniping wallet, never your main vault. The advice in our burner wallet guide for airdrops and meme coins applies one-for-one here. You will sign hundreds of transactions across the lifecycle of a sniping setup, and the marginal contract you interact with may be malicious. Isolate the funds.
The 10-Step TON Memecoin Sniping Process
This is the core workflow. Run it in order every time. Skipping steps is how sniping turns into gambling.
Connect via TON Connect
Open Not.Trade, click the connect button top-right, choose Tonkeeper or MyTonWallet, scan the QR or confirm in-app. The wallet balance pill (for example, "1.59" TON) replaces the connect button when you are in. If you plan to multi-wallet snipe, repeat with each sniping wallet now, not later.
Fund the wallets
Top up each sniping wallet with enough TON to cover the trade size plus an order of magnitude in gas headroom. If you plan to buy 10 TON per snipe, fund the wallet with at least 11 TON. Gas on TON is cheap, but jetton transfers consume more than native sends, and you do not want your safety order failing for lack of balance.
Configure multi-wallet sniping
In the wallet selector, add each connected wallet to the active snipe group. The header indicator switches from "1" to "2", "3", or whatever count you have set. When you click buy, the order routes to all selected wallets simultaneously, splitting size or repeating size depending on your preset.
Open Memescope New Pairs
Click the Memescope tab. The first of three columns is "New Pairs". Set the filter to NEWEST. Cards stream in real time with the "Recent" tag on the freshest jettons. Each card shows ticker, full name, age in hours, USD price, market cap, social icons, and a "Buy 10 TON" quick button.
Click into the token info panel
The card expands into the full token view: live chart, Buy/Sell card, and the safety panel with Top 10, INSIDERS, SNIPERS, DEV M., BUNDLERS, LP LOCK badges plus holders count, DEX PAID flag, and TAX. This is the safety screen we read in the next step.
Run the insider safety check
Hard gates: Top 10 holders under 25 percent, INSIDERS under 10 percent, BUNDLERS under 15 percent, DEV wallet not selling, LP LOCK green, TAX under 5 percent on both sides. If any single gate fails, skip the token. There is always another one.
Set slippage and enable MEV protection
In the Buy card, toggle MEV ON. Set slippage to a level that survives the first 30 seconds of trading without being a free wick target. Our default is 15 percent on a fresh launch, dropping to 5 percent within minutes once price action steadies.
Execute the snipe
Click the preset (10 TON, 25 TON, custom) or use the in-card amount field. If you set multi-wallet, all wallets fire together. Sign in each wallet (Tonkeeper push notification, or in-Telegram approval). Watch the BOUGHT row at the bottom of the trade card flip from waiting to confirmed.
Layer an MCAP-trigger limit sell
Switch to the Sell tab, toggle Limit, open the TRIGGER WHEN MCAP REACHES widget, set a target (for example, 5x entry market cap). Use the quick triggers (-50, -25, -10, +10, +25, +50, +100 percent) for partial take-profit. Create the order. The exit is now armed.
Monitor in Tracker and Portfolio
Tracker shows live PnL on every open position aggregated across wallets. Portfolio shows historical PnL and current holdings. If the chart breaks structure before your MCAP trigger fires, you can manually cut. If structure holds, do nothing. The limit sell is the plan.
Multi-Wallet Sniping: Setup, Logic, and Trade-Offs
Multi-wallet sniping is the biggest single feature that separates Not.Trade from generic Telegram bots. The core idea: instead of one wallet placing one order, several connected wallets place orders in parallel from the same click. That delivers three concrete benefits.
First, you reduce per-wallet position size while keeping total exposure flat. If a token implements a per-wallet sell tax that escalates above a certain holding, spreading the buy across four wallets each holding 25 percent of your target position dodges the punitive tier. The token contract sees four medium holders rather than one whale, and your sell side ends up cheaper.
Second, you neutralize the "top holder" reputation drag. If you buy 5 percent of supply from a single wallet, Memescope will tag your address in the Top 10 readout of every subsequent trader. They will see a fresh wallet with 5 percent of supply and assume insider or sniper, which weakens the token narrative. Split across five wallets and you disappear into the long tail of holders.
Third, you create natural exit liquidity. When the MCAP trigger fires, the limit sells go off from multiple wallets, with different fingerprints in the on-chain history. Other automated bots that key on "one whale dumping" do not react the same way. The pattern looks like coordinated profit-taking from a community rather than a single exit.
Setup is straightforward. Generate four to six fresh TON wallets (Tonkeeper supports multiple accounts in-app, MyTonWallet does the same in-extension). Fund each with enough TON for the per-wallet snipe slice plus a 10 percent gas buffer. Connect all of them to Not.Trade through TON Connect. The header indicator updates from "1" to the total wallet count as you connect. In the wallet group selector, choose which wallets participate in the next snipe. Most sessions, we run with four wallets active and one held in reserve.
There are trade-offs. Gas spend multiplies (a rounding error on TON, but worth tracking). Wallet management becomes a real task: you have to redistribute TON between wallets between sessions. Signing also takes longer if you are signing from Tonkeeper one wallet at a time on mobile, so for serious multi-wallet sniping we recommend running Not.Trade in Telegram or using the desktop Tonkeeper extension with multiple accounts pre-imported.
One important nuance: do not interpret multi-wallet sniping as a way to bypass safety checks. Spreading 20 TON across five wallets does not make a honeypot less of a honeypot. You will lose all five buys instead of one big one. The discipline that matters is the safety panel read in step 6, not the wallet topology. Finally, plan your wallet rotation. After a few weeks of active sniping with the same set, generate a new set, transfer the float, and retire the old wallets.
The Not.Trade Safety Panel, Read Badge by Badge
The token info panel on Not.Trade is the single most important piece of pre-snipe data. Every badge has a job. Here is exactly how we read them and what triggers a skip.
Top 10 (concentration)
Total percentage of supply held by the top 10 wallets. Under 25 percent is healthy. 25 to 40 percent is yellow (you can still snipe a small position if the chart structure is exceptional). Above 40 percent is an automatic skip unless you can verify the top wallets are locked liquidity, vesting contracts, or known team treasuries.
INSIDERS
Wallets identified as connected to the deployer, often by funding path or contract interaction patterns. Under 10 percent is acceptable. Anything double-digit is a soft skip, and triple-digit basis points (15 percent+) is an immediate skip. Insider concentration is the single biggest predictor of a coordinated dump.
SNIPERS
Wallets that bought in the first one or two blocks. A small sniper count (under 5 percent) is normal and even healthy (other smart money agrees with you). Above 20 percent means a coordinated bundler-style entry, and you are almost certainly going to be exit liquidity unless you front-run their take-profit.
DEV M. (dev moves)
Did the deployer wallet sell? If yes, the badge will flag in red. Any dev sell within the first few hours of launch is a hard skip. Even small dev sells are a signal the team is not committed and that the curve will be defended by no one.
BUNDLERS
Multi-wallet entries clustered into the same transaction or block, indicating coordinated buy-side activity (the same address funding many fresh wallets). Under 15 percent is workable. Above that, you are competing against organized capital with a head start.
LP LOCK
Is the liquidity pool token locked (and for how long)? If LP is unlocked, the deployer can pull liquidity in a single transaction and the token goes to zero. We require LP locked for at least 30 days for any snipe over a single-digit TON size.
DEX PAID and TAX
DEX PAID indicates whether the project has paid for DEX listing services (sometimes a positive signal, sometimes irrelevant). TAX is the buy/sell tax. We avoid anything above 5 percent on either side, and we strongly prefer 0/0.
A practical example: when INTERN appeared in Memescope at $7.91K market cap, the safety panel showed a low Top 10, near-zero insiders, no dev sells, LP locked, and 0/0 tax. That is the profile that justifies a snipe. UTYA, which has been live for 769 days and sits at $36.37M market cap, is a different kind of trade entirely (more like a swing on an established meme), and you would not snipe it in the same sense, but the safety badges still apply if you are buying a position.
If you want a deeper dive on detecting manipulated metrics around token launches in general, our piece on detecting fake volume in crypto charts covers the patterns that show up across chains, not just TON.
MEV Protection and Slippage: The Trade-Off
The MEV toggle on Not.Trade routes your transaction through protected paths that reduce exposure to sandwich attacks and front-running bots. On TON, the MEV environment is less hostile than on Solana or Ethereum, but it is not zero, and the toggle is essentially free to leave on. We always enable it for snipes. The minor latency cost is invisible at human reaction times, and the protection materially reduces the probability of getting wicked into a wider fill than your slippage allowed.
Slippage is where actual judgment matters. Set it too low and the snipe fails (transaction reverts, you miss the entry). Set it too high and you hand free money to MEV bots or wider organic spread. Our defaults look like this:
Slippage by launch age
- First 60 seconds: 15 percent (volatility absorbs anything tighter)
- 1 to 5 minutes: 8 to 10 percent
- 5 to 30 minutes: 5 percent
- 30 minutes plus: 3 percent or tighter
Adjust upward by 5 percent if the safety panel shows a higher sniper count (more competition for the early fill) and downward if liquidity is unusually deep relative to market cap. The slippage figure is not a magic number, it is a buffer for price impact between transaction submission and inclusion. Anything left on the table at the high end is realised loss, anything missing at the low end is missed entries.
If you want the deeper theory on why slippage settings matter across DEXs and how to think about them, our complete slippage tutorial covers the general framework.
Exit Strategy: The MCAP-Trigger Limit Sell
Most sniping losses are not on the entry, they are on the exit. Either the trader has no plan and rides the position from green back through their entry into red, or the trader has a plan but does not stick to it when the chart pulls back and pumps again. The cure for both is to set the exit order before you think about it, so the decision is made at peak rationality (immediately after the snipe) rather than peak emotion (mid-pump or mid-dump).
Not.Trade ships with an MCAP-triggered limit sell widget that solves this elegantly. Instead of expressing your exit as a token price (which is psychologically slippery on a memecoin where 100x moves are normal), you express it as a market cap. "Sell 25 percent at $100K MCAP, sell 50 percent at $250K MCAP, sell the remainder at $1M MCAP" is a much more legible plan than a chain of unrelated price targets.
Standard exit ladder for a sub-$10K MCAP snipe
- 25 percent sold at 3x entry MCAP (de-risk the principal)
- 25 percent sold at 5x entry MCAP (lock in profit)
- 25 percent sold at 10x entry MCAP (the moonshot tier)
- 25 percent runs as a moonbag with a 50 percent trailing stop on MCAP
The widget exposes quick triggers (-50, -25, -10, now, +10, +25, +50, +100 percent) which lets you build the ladder in seconds, plus a free-input field for custom MCAP targets if you want them. Once the ladder is set, you walk away. Tracker will show the orders firing as MCAP hits each trigger, and your Portfolio will register the realized PnL automatically.
A critical detail: the MCAP trigger reads on-chain liquidity and circulating supply continuously. If the token is paused, delisted from a DEX, or honeypotted, the trigger cannot fire. This is one more reason the pre-snipe safety check matters. A clean snipe with a fired exit ladder is the win condition, and the safety check is the gate to a clean snipe.
For longer-running positions (think TONTOPIA, which is sitting at $48.83K of hourly volume and $29.72K market cap as of this writing, and may swing for days), you can layer multiple sells across days or weeks. The MCAP framing is especially useful because hourly chart noise is high on memecoins but the MCAP trajectory is the actual fundamental you care about.
Real TON Memecoin Examples Worth Studying
Pattern recognition matters in sniping. Study these recent and ongoing TON memecoins not because they are recommendations, but because they show the shapes you will encounter. All of them have been visible on Not.Trade Memescope at one point or another.
The instructive contrast is UTYA versus INTERN. UTYA is the long-tail success: a 769-day-old memecoin still doing $192K of daily volume at a $36M market cap. It is a position trade, not a snipe. INTERN, on the other hand, at 21 hours old with $7.91K market cap and $143K of trailing volume, is the textbook snipe candidate (assuming the safety panel checks out). You snipe one, you swing-trade the other, and you do not confuse them.
If you want to understand which TON memecoins have real staying power and which are sniping fodder, our TON memecoins guide covering top tokens and how to trade them goes deeper into the established names. This article focuses on the sniping technique, that one focuses on which jettons are actually worth your attention.
Alpha Sources: Where TON Launches Get Announced
Memescope New Pairs is the discovery surface, but not the only one. Serious snipers cross-reference with two other channels: curated Telegram alpha groups and on-chain pool-creation watchers.
Telegram alpha is a double-edged sword. It is where many TON teams announce launches before they hit scanners, putting you minutes ahead. But the TON alpha scene is overwhelmingly low-quality: pure shilling or rotational pump groups where admins are exit liquidity. Curate aggressively, and never buy because a Telegram message recommended it. Channels are an early-warning system, not a signal.
On-chain pool watchers (STON.fi and DeDust expose pool-creation events) give a deterministic feed of every new jetton pair. The downside is volume: many fake pools and rugs daily, so the safety check in step 6 matters even more.
Cleanest workflow: Memescope primary, Telegram channels as early-warning, on-chain watchers as exhaustive sweep. When the same token appears in two or three streams within minutes, it is worth the click into the safety panel.
Risks You Need to Internalize
Sniping TON memecoins is profitable for disciplined operators and brutal for everyone else. The risks below are the ones that will actually take money from your wallet. Read them, internalize them, and let them shape every snipe.
Honeypots
A token where the buy function works but the sell function is blocked or capped. You buy, you watch the chart pump, you try to sell, and the transaction reverts (or sells at a 99 percent tax). Not.Trade transaction simulation surfaces most honeypots in advance, but new honeypot patterns appear every week. The defense is to test-sell a tiny fraction (1 to 2 percent of position) within the first few minutes of any snipe before committing to a full hold.
Dev dumps
The deployer wallet sells its full position into thin liquidity. Chart drops 80 percent in one block. The DEV M. badge catches the start of this pattern, but only after the first sell has already happened. The defense is to not snipe tokens where the deployer holds more than 5 to 10 percent of supply.
Insider concentration
Top 10 wallets above 40 percent of supply. Even with a clean dev wallet, the cluster of insiders can dump coordinately and crater the price. The INSIDERS badge handles the bulk of this read.
LP rugs
If liquidity is not locked, the deployer can pull all pool liquidity in one transaction and the token instantly goes to zero. The LP LOCK badge is non-negotiable, require it green for every snipe.
Telegram alpha scams
Coordinated pump groups masquerading as alpha channels. The channel announces a token, members rush in, channel admins (who pre-loaded) sell into the rush, members are left underwater. Never buy because a channel told you to. Always run your own safety check, even on tokens that look organic.
Bundler walls
Coordinated multi-wallet entries (often 10 to 50 freshly funded wallets) that consume the first one or two blocks of trading and leave retail to absorb the next dump. BUNDLERS badge above 15 percent is a strong signal.
A broader perspective on the family of risks you face when trading anything new on-chain is worth grounding in the basics: our crypto wallet security tips and avoid crypto address poisoning scams guides cover the wallet-level surface area that complements the safety panel reading we just did. Sniping is risky enough on its own, do not stack a compromised wallet on top.
Common Sniping Mistakes
Sniping without a safety read
Clicking the Buy 10 TON quick button from Memescope card without expanding to the token info panel. Speed feels valuable, but the safety check is a 5 second action that filters most rugs.
No exit ladder
Snipe, enjoy the pump, freeze on the exit decision, watch the position give back gains. The MCAP-trigger limit sell must be set within the first minute of the snipe, not after the chart moves.
Oversizing
Treating a snipe like a conviction trade. Snipes are small, repeatable bets. The expected outcome on any single snipe is moderate loss, the strategy works because of the outliers. Size accordingly.
Chasing
Sniping a token that has already 3x-ed in the first hour. The snipe window has closed. Either treat it as a trend trade with a real chart-based stop, or skip.
Ignoring TON gas headroom
Funding a wallet with exactly the snipe amount and then having the safety limit sell transaction fail for lack of gas. Always keep 10 percent buffer per wallet.
Mixing snipe and main wallet
Connecting your main TON vault to a sniping terminal. Use dedicated burner wallets, no exceptions.
Pros and Cons of Sniping on Not.Trade
Pros
- Memescope New Pairs is the cleanest TON discovery surface
- Safety panel collapses minutes of research into one read
- Multi-wallet sniping built into the core flow
- MCAP-trigger limit sells unique among TON terminals
- MEV protection on by default
- Works on web and inside Telegram
- Cross-DEX routing (STON.fi and DeDust)
Cons
- TON-only, no cross-chain coverage
- Multi-wallet setup requires manual wallet management
- Safety badges are heuristics, not guarantees
- Pre-launch alpha still requires external Telegram curation
- Learning curve on the trade card and limit widget
- Performance during peak launches depends on TON network state
Best Practices Recap
- Use a dedicated burner wallet set, never your main vault
- Multi-wallet snipe by default once you are comfortable with the basic flow
- Always read the full safety panel before clicking buy
- Set slippage by launch age, not by reflex
- Keep MEV protection ON
- Set the MCAP-trigger limit sell within 60 seconds of the snipe
- Test-sell a small fraction within minutes of entry to confirm liquidity works both ways
- Rotate sniping wallets every few weeks
- Treat Telegram alpha as early warning, not signal
- Track your snipe history. Win rate plus average winner versus average loser is the only metric that matters
If you want to broaden the sniping playbook to other chains and tooling stacks, our DexTools-focused guide on sniping new token launches covers the EVM workflow, and the principles map onto TON with the chain-specific differences we covered above. For chain-agnostic risk management around fresh launches, the MEV protection in 2026 guide is the natural companion to this article.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q Is sniping TON memecoins legal?
Sniping is buying tokens early on a public DEX, which is legal in most jurisdictions. What is not legal is insider-coordinated wash trading, pump-and-dump schemes you participate in as an organizer, or evading local tax obligations on gains. Check your local rules around crypto trading and reporting, and never act on non-public information from a project team.
Q How much TON do I need to start sniping?
Practical minimum is around 50 TON spread across four wallets. That gives you 10 TON per snipe with comfortable gas buffer and enough float to handle a sequence of losses before reloading. Below that, fees and slippage eat too much of the position size to be efficient.
Q What is the difference between sniping and aping?
Sniping is a disciplined process: filter, safety check, sized entry, pre-loaded exit. Aping is buying because something looks fun, without a process. Sniping has a positive expected value over many trades when executed cleanly. Aping does not.
Q Why use multi-wallet sniping instead of one bigger order?
Multi-wallet sniping spreads your position across several addresses, which keeps you out of the Top 10 holder list, can dodge per-wallet tax tiers, and creates natural exit liquidity when your MCAP-trigger sells fire from different wallets at the same time. It also reduces the reputational drag of being identified as a single whale.
Q How do I know if a TON token is a honeypot?
Not.Trade simulates the buy and sell transactions before you submit, and most honeypots are caught at this stage. As a second layer of defense, do a small test-sell (1 to 2 percent of position) within the first few minutes of your snipe. If the sell goes through cleanly, the token is most likely not a honeypot. If it reverts or sells at a punitive tax, exit fully and move on.
Q What slippage should I set for a brand-new TON memecoin?
15 percent for the first 60 seconds of trading, 8 to 10 percent from 1 to 5 minutes, 5 percent from 5 to 30 minutes, and 3 percent or tighter beyond that. Adjust upward if the safety panel shows a high sniper count and downward if liquidity is deep relative to market cap.
Q Does MEV happen on TON the same way as on Ethereum?
No. TON has a different transaction routing model and asynchronous shard-based finality, so classic Ethereum-style sandwich attacks are less common. The bigger MEV-like risk on TON is bundler bots that buy a large fraction of supply in the first block. Not.Trade MEV protection still helps, and we leave it on by default.
Q Can I snipe TON memecoins from a mobile phone?
Yes. Not.Trade runs inside Telegram, which is mobile-first, and Tonkeeper plus MyTonWallet are both mobile-native. The user experience for multi-wallet sniping is smoother on desktop, but a one-wallet snipe from a phone via Telegram works well and is fast.
Q What MCAP target should I set for my exit ladder?
Our default ladder for a sub-$10K MCAP entry: 25 percent sold at 3x entry MCAP, 25 percent at 5x, 25 percent at 10x, and 25 percent as a moonbag with a trailing stop. Adjust upward if entry MCAP is higher (a $100K MCAP snipe rarely 10x-es), downward if you have especially high conviction.
Q How is the Not.Trade Memescope different from a generic TON scanner?
Memescope is a curated discovery surface with three columns: New Pairs (newest jettons by age), Volume 1H (top volume movers), and Top Tokens (trending). Generic scanners list everything indiscriminately and require manual filtering. Memescope filters and ranks for you, and each card has a quick-buy preset built in.
Q Do I need to know how jettons work technically to snipe them?
Not in detail, but a high-level understanding helps. Jettons use per-wallet contracts (each holder has their own jetton wallet), which is why gas is slightly higher than a simple native transfer. Not.Trade abstracts all of that. Conceptually, treat a jetton like an SPL token on Solana or an ERC-20 on Ethereum.
Q What is the realistic win rate for a disciplined TON sniper?
Most disciplined snipers run 30 to 40 percent win rates by trade count, with average winners several multiples larger than average losers. The strategy is profitable because of the right-skewed return distribution, not because most trades win. If you expect a high win rate, you will be discouraged after a normal losing streak and quit before the math has time to work.
Conclusion: Sniping Is a Process, Not a Vibe
Sniping TON memecoins with Not.Trade rewards three things: discipline on the safety check, consistency on the entry, and a pre-loaded exit you actually trust. Memescope New Pairs is the discovery surface, the safety panel is the filter, multi-wallet sniping is the position structure, and the MCAP-trigger limit sell ladder is the exit machine. Each component is small, but the chain is the edge.
Most traders who try sniping fail because they treat it as a vibe. They click the 10 TON quick button without expanding the token info panel, fail to set an exit, and learn an expensive lesson. The traders who succeed treat sniping as a repeatable workflow with rules that survive the heat of the moment. Your exact rules may differ from ours, but the existence of rules is non-negotiable.
Open Not.Trade. Connect a fresh burner wallet via TON Connect. Fund it. Watch Memescope. Run the safety check. Snipe with MEV on and slippage tuned to launch age. Set the MCAP-trigger limit sell ladder before you do anything else. Most of the time, nothing happens. Sometimes the ladder fires. That is the whole job.
For the broader TON memecoin landscape, read our companion guide on TON memecoins, top tokens, and how to trade them. For everything Not.Trade does beyond sniping, the complete Not.Trade terminal guide is the reference. For the wider TON bot ecosystem, our best TON trading bots guide compares alternatives. Sniping is a process. Run the process.
Related Guides
- Not.Trade Limit Orders: TON Memecoin MCAP Triggers Guide 2026
- Top 3 TON Trading Terminals 2026: Not.Trade vs STON.fi vs DeDust
- TON Terminal: Complete Guide to Not.Trade - The Fastest TON Trading App (2026)
- Not.Trade vs Trojan: TON vs Solana Telegram Terminals 2026
- Not.Trade vs Photon: TON vs Solana Web Terminals 2026