Fairness as Architecture
Why "We Prohibit This" Doesn't Work
Most platforms that care about fairness try to enforce it through rules. Don't bundle. Don't snipe. Don't use bots. The problem is that rules only work if they can be enforced - and on-chain mechanics make most extraction vectors impossible to police. The sophisticated actor ignores the rules, executes the strategy anyway, and the community is left holding the result.
Spawn doesn't take that approach. Fairness on Spawn isn't a policy - it's a property of the execution engine.
What Spawn Eliminates by Design
MEV extraction. On most on-chain platforms, validators and searchers can reorder transactions within a block to extract value. This happens invisibly, at the expense of ordinary participants. Spawn's off-chain execution model removes the mempool entirely - there's no transaction ordering to exploit.
Bundling attacks. Bundlers coordinate multiple wallets to acquire large early supply positions, then sell into rising community demand. It's a form of front-running that conventional launchpads can't prevent architecturally. Spawn's execution model makes this structurally impossible - not difficult, not discouraged, impossible.
Queue-jumping. On-chain gas bidding lets well-capitalized participants guarantee their transactions execute before others. Spawn's off-chain engine handles execution without a gas auction, so queue position isn't for sale.
What Remains
Equal footing. Every participant - regardless of wallet count, capital size, or technical sophistication - operates in the same market with the same execution conditions.
This isn't idealism. It's a design choice that makes Spawn's price discovery more accurate: when extraction is impossible, prices reflect actual conviction.