Start Watching These Creator Coins Right Now
- Spot Socials
- Aug 27
- 5 min read
Written by Jason Krutzky, Chartered Meme Technician at Spot Trading.
What's poppin' y'all,
Livestreaming is the perfect medium for our always-online world. Want to share your thoughts, or bigger, your entire life? Go live. Get instant feedback while your audience helps you create in real-time.
And if you're a livestreamer, you live and die by clips. Those short, viral moments are the lifeblood of your attention economy.
But why am I talking about livestreaming when this is a newsletter about memecoins?
Because livestreaming is baked directly into Pump.Fun. They're calling it 'Creator Capital Markets.' Pretty catchy little title, I gotta say.
The Pump.Fun Creator Economy
For those of you just joining the chat, a few months back, Pump.fun integrated live streaming directly into the platform. Creators can launch coins tied to their personal brand, then livestream to build community and drive engagement around their token.
It's genius, really. Instead of just hoping your coin gets picked up by speculators, you're building a direct relationship with your holders through live content. Your audience becomes your investors, and your investors become your most engaged audience.
The reason I'm bringing this up now is because clips from several livestreamers on Pump.fun have been hitting my timeline like crazy lately, and it has me speculating...
How will Pump.fun support these creators? Obviously, they're providing the infrastructure, but is it possible they'll also support them financially by buying their coins the same way they've done for big coin communities, like $TROLL?
This speculation got me digging, and I found a common thread among the creators gaining traction: Their coins' charts all look really similar.
Specifically, they're all forming really nice bases.
And if I haven't made it abundantly clear up to this point, I am definitively planting my flag in the ground right now and declaring:

Start Watching These Creator Coins Right Now
I'm gonna cut straight to the chase here and hit you with the six creators that keep showing up on my timeline. These are the coins I'm most interested in.

From what I can tell, this girl is live more often than anyone on this list. She's taking the 'follow my entire life' approach, and it appears to be working.
After spending months in the $400k market cap range, her coin, $ZESTY, saw some big volume yesterday and has hit new all-time highs for the past two days.
You can tune into her stream here.


Gainzy is an OG. He's been in crypto for a few cycles and has built a huge audience on X over the years. He's a straight shooter, and he rants a lot, but he's got quite a bit of wisdom to impart on new entrants to the space.
The coin initially did really well, but sold off and has been basing in the $3m mc range since late June. It's just starting to come out of the base now.
You can tune into his stream here.


Rasmr's been around a while, and is connected to LA Vape Cabal guys like Frank DeGods and ThreadGuy. One thing that he's doing really well is creating viral moments by going live in public, doing interviews and skits. He's also started hosting spaces on X regularly, and a lot of people are tuning in.
His coin's chart looks really interesting, basing just above the 78.6% retracement since mid-June.
You can tune into his stream here.


Basedd house is spearheaded by a fella named Jakey (pictured above). He's also been in the CT KOL game for a while. It seems like he and his crew are taking a slightly different approach than the rest by framing their streams as 'Episodes'. It feels a bit more like a TV show with a live twist vs. stream of consciousness winging it.
Same deal on the chart here as is the case on $RASMR. It spent two months trading just above the 78.6% retracement and is now emerging out of the base.
You can tune into their stream here.


Frankly, this dude's content is not for me, but I do think perhaps it might be for teenage girls. Do teenage girls buy coins? I honestly have no idea, but if they do, he's probably one to keep an eye on.
Regarding the coin, it's the youngest of the bunch, but it's one of the most constructive charts, edging towards new all-time highs today.
You can tune into his stream here.


I'd be remiss if I didn't mention Trevv. I've been seeing him pop up on my timeline occasionally over the past year or so, but more now than ever. This dude is a literal crackhead. Completely batshit insane. But people, particularly KOLs on CT, seem to really love him, as problematic as he might be.
I honestly don't know how this dude's coin hasn't died, but then again, I'm not certain how HE hasn't died. Regardless, it has been accumulating in the 78-90% range since Mid-July, and I'm watching for a move out of that range.
You can tune into his stream here.

The Takeaway
I think it must be said: My job here is not to judge the quality or type of content these people are putting out. I am merely an observer of trends.
And the trend I see in all of these coins is that they haven't died. In fact, quite the opposite.
While some are newer than others, they've all seen 78-90% drawdowns from initial highs, and they're all either:
Consolidating down there now
Rising out of multi-month bases
Or making new all-time highs today
To me, that's very interesting. It suggests there's real community and potential staying power behind these creator tokens, not just pump-and-dump speculation.
But let's be clear: These are all highly, highly speculative, low-market cap coins. The risks in getting involved in any of them are high. If you choose to put some money to work, do so cautiously and size for zero.
But just the same as I've suggested before: The easiest way for Pump.fun to build out its creator ecosystem is to have a few key creator coins do extremely well.
To me, that's a surefire way to get eyes on the tech, but also a hack for attracting bigger-name streamers without having to pay them loads to switch from other platforms like Twitch or Kick.
The creator capital markets experiment is just getting started. And if it works? We might be looking at the future of how creators monetize their audiences.
Food for thought, at the very least.

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