If you want to catch new tokens on Robinhood Chain, you need to know where they're actually being deployed — and as of mid-July 2026 the answer is not where most people assume. NOXA was roughly 75% of all deploys until it died around July 11–13 and relaunched as "Pons," which is now the #1 launchpad at about 930 deploys per hour. flap.sh carries the biggest bonding-curve volume. Clanker deploys straight into Uniswap v4. And the launchpad people expected to dominate, hood.fun, is near-dead — 8 graduations in its entire lifetime. Here's the real map of where tokens launch on Robinhood Chain.
The launchpad map, at a glance
| Launchpad (as of mid-July 2026) | Role |
|---|
| Pons (ex-NOXA) | #1 by deploy count, ~930 deploys/hr |
| NOXA | Was ~75% of deploys; died ~Jul 11–13, relaunched as Pons |
| flap.sh | Biggest bonding-curve volume |
| Clanker | Deploys into Uniswap v4 |
| hood.fun | Near-dead — 8 lifetime graduations |
Robinhood Chain is an Arbitrum Orbit L2 with a private, no-mempool sequencer — new to it, start with our Robinhood Chain explainer. On Solana the launchpad landscape is comparatively stable; on RHC it is volatile enough that a platform can go from three-quarters of the chain to dead in a weekend.
NOXA to Pons: the 75% platform that rebranded overnight
For most of the chain's early life, one launchpad, NOXA, accounted for roughly 75% of all token deploys on Robinhood Chain. That is an extraordinary concentration — a single platform manufacturing three of every four new tokens. Then, around July 11–13, NOXA died and relaunched as "Pons." Pons is now the #1 launchpad by deploy count, running at about 930 deploys per hour.
The practical lesson: on Robinhood Chain, the dominant launchpad is a moving target. If your token discovery is hard-wired to a platform name, a rebrand like NOXA→Pons breaks your feed overnight while deploys continue uninterrupted under a new label. This is exactly why we track deploys at the chain level rather than trusting any one platform to stay put — the mechanics of catching them are covered in how to find new tokens on Robinhood Chain before they graduate.
flap.sh, Clanker, and the shape of the rest
Deploy count is only one axis. flap.sh doesn't lead on raw deploys but carries the biggest bonding-curve volume on the chain — the tokens launched there attract the most trading capital into their curves, which matters more than deploy count if you care about liquidity rather than noise.
Clanker is architecturally different: rather than running its own bonding curve to graduation, it deploys tokens directly into Uniswap v4. That's a meaningful distinction for anyone building around graduation events — a Clanker token's liquidity path doesn't look like a curve-and-bond launchpad, so the "graduation" signal you'd watch for on other platforms isn't the right trigger there.
Between them, these three platforms tell you the three things that actually matter about a launch: how many tokens are being minted (Pons), where the trading volume is going (flap.sh), and which liquidity venue a token lands in (Clanker → Uniswap v4).
The intuitive guess for "the Pump.fun of Robinhood Chain" was hood.fun — the name practically writes itself. The data says otherwise: as of mid-July 2026, hood.fun has 8 graduations in its entire lifetime. It is effectively dead as a launch venue. We wrote up the platform on its own in hood.fun explained; the short version is that a memorable name did not translate into deploys or graduations, and the chain's actual meme activity (see Robinhood Chain memecoins) routed around it to NOXA/Pons and flap.sh instead.
This is a recurring pattern across chains: the launchpad that sounds canonical is rarely the one that wins on volume. Compare the Solana side, where the leading platforms are also not always the obvious brand names, in our best Solana launchpads compared.