
AI launchpad Clanker’s new ecosystem fund will recycle most protocol fees on Base into CLANKER buybacks, grants, and infra for Farcaster’s creator community.
Summary
- AI launchpad Clanker, now owned by Neynar via its acquisition of Farcaster, has launched the Clanker Ecosystem Fund to recycle protocol fees back into builders.
- The fund has already deployed $8 million to buy 14% of the CLANKER supply, with future fees earmarked for infrastructure and community initiatives across Clanker and Farcaster.
- Clanker has generated over $50 million in cumulative protocol fees on Base since late 2024, cementing it as one of the highest‑earning SocialFi primitives.
AI‑driven token launchpad Clanker has unveiled the Clanker Ecosystem Fund (CEF), committing to redirect a significant share of protocol fees to creators, infrastructure teams and communities building on Clanker and Farcaster. Neynar, which is acquiring decentralized social protocol Farcaster and its associated assets, now controls Clanker’s contracts and treasury, with Farcaster co‑founder Dan Romero saying the package “adds even stronger commercial returns” thanks to Clanker’s fee machine on Base. Operated as an autonomous AI launchpad on Coinbase’s Base network, Clanker has already generated more than $50 million in cumulative protocol fees since its late‑2024 launch, according to KuCoin and BingX research.
In its latest update, Farcaster disclosed that “$8 million has already been used to purchase 14% of CLANKER,” effectively converting a chunk of past protocol fees into long‑term exposure to the launchpad’s native asset and its community. That build on earlier commitments laid out when Farcaster first acquired Clanker in October 2025, where the team pledged that “two‑thirds (2/3) of the current and future fees in the Clanker ecosystem will be allocated to purchase and redeem tokens $CLANKER,” while around 7% of supply was locked in one‑sided liquidity to deepen markets.
Farcaster summarized the model on X by noting that Clanker had already used “two‑thirds of the protocol fees generated in the previous day to purchase approximately $65,000 worth of CLANKER tokens,” with the remaining third held in USDC for tax obligations, and said the buyback process would be automated over time. According to KuCoin’s coverage of the protocol, Clanker’s fee engine is powered by a 1% transaction fee on tokens it deploys, with 40% of that going to token creators and 60% to the protocol—funds that CEF will now recycle into grants, infrastructure and additional buybacks.
Clanker runs as an AI agent embedded in the Farcaster social graph, allowing users to mint and list ERC‑20 tokens on Uniswap V3 simply by tagging the bot in a cast, which then handles minting, WETH pairing and LP token locking until 2100. KuCoin and BingX both highlight that this model has turned Clanker into a “yield‑generating machine for the Base network,” with weekly protocol fees recently surpassing $8 million on record weeks and daily token launches pushing toward 13,000.
As Neynar absorbs Farcaster’s infrastructure and Clanker’s revenue stream, analysts at outlets such as Bankless argue the deal effectively makes Neynar a core economic node for Base‑native SocialFi, even as Merkle Manufactory returns roughly $180 million in raised capital to investors. Within that context, CEF’s decision to route tens of millions of dollars in protocol cash flow back into creators and infra looks less like a marketing stunt and more like an attempt to hard‑wire “real yield” and long‑term loyalty into one of Base’s most profitable—and most copy‑pasted—AI launchpad designs.







