Not.Trade vs Trojan: TON vs Solana Telegram Terminals 2026
— By Tony Rabbit in Tutorials

Not.Trade and Trojan dominate TON and Solana memecoin trading. Compare fees, features, safety scoring and which terminal wins in 2026.
Not.Trade vs Trojan: Two Telegram Terminals, Two Chains, One Comparison
Memecoin trading in 2026 has split into two parallel worlds. On Solana, a generation of traders has been raised on Trojan, the Telegram bot that turned chat commands into a full sniping cockpit. On TON, a newer challenger named Not.Trade has built the same workflow as a hybrid web and Telegram terminal, leaning on the network behind Telegram itself. Same model, different chains.
This article puts both side by side. We will look at how each platform handles token discovery, limit orders, multi wallet sniping, safety scoring, fees and distribution. We will use the real TON jettons that Not.Trade currently surfaces in its Memescope panel (UTYA, MTONGA, TSHIB, TONTOPIA, INTERN, $80) and we will benchmark them against the Solana flow that any Trojan user already knows.
The goal is not to crown a winner. The goal is to understand which terminal fits which kind of trader, why TON and Solana now compete for the same memecoin attention span, and where Not.Trade earns its place next to the most battle tested Solana bot of the cycle. If you already use Trojan and you have been hearing the words TON Memescope on your Telegram, this is the comparison you were looking for.
What Not.Trade and Trojan Actually Are
Featured snippet definition. Not.Trade and Trojan are leading Telegram native trading terminals for crypto memecoins, but on different chains. Trojan dominates Solana with a chat only sniper bot launched in 2024. Not.Trade is the TON native equivalent, with a richer web plus Telegram interface, MCAP triggered limit orders, insider safety scoring panels and one click swaps across STON.fi and DeDust routing.
Trojan, accessed through @TrojanOnSolana_bot, follows the classic Telegram sniper template. You open a chat, link a wallet, paste a Solana token address and the bot returns a card with price, market cap, holders, MEV protection toggle and buy buttons in preset SOL amounts. Everything happens inside the Telegram interface. There is no separate website to log into and the user experience is, by design, a chat with a bot.
Not.Trade, tagline "The fastest terminal on TON," takes a different shape. It runs as a web application at not.trade with an authenticated dashboard, and it pairs with the same Telegram channel rail that TON traders already live in. The authenticated dashboard exposes four primary sections: Memescope, Tracker, Portfolio and Rewards. The header carries a search bar that accepts ticker, symbol or a TON address pasted directly into the box. A wallet balance widget shows your live TON balance on the top right, and a green dot in the footer reports "Connection stable" so you always know if the WebSocket feed is alive.
In one line, Trojan is a chat. Not.Trade is a chart, a chat and a portfolio dashboard wrapped together. If you want to understand the deeper anatomy of the TON terminal before reading the comparison, the complete Not.Trade guide walks through every screen. If you want the Solana side fresh in mind first, the Trojan bot tutorial covers the chat workflow end to end.
A Quick History of Both Terminals
To understand why these two products look so similar yet feel so different, it helps to remember the chains underneath them.
Solana hit memecoin escape velocity in 2023 and 2024. Pump.fun turned token creation into a one minute experience. Raydium and Meteora became the default exit liquidity. Around that ecosystem, Telegram sniper bots like Trojan, BONKbot and Maestro raced to wrap chain interactions into chat commands. Trojan stood out for its clean menus, its MEV protection toggle and the fact that it shipped copy trading early. Its fee model settled around 0.9 percent per swap and the user base grew alongside the Pump.fun launch curve.
TON, meanwhile, played a longer game. The chain that started as Telegram Open Network in 2018 spent years building infrastructure: TON Connect for wallet handshakes, Tonkeeper for everyday custody, jettons as the fungible token standard, and two competing decentralised exchanges, STON.fi and DeDust. Memecoin culture arrived late on TON compared to Solana, but when it arrived it brought hundreds of millions of Telegram users already inside the messaging app. Tokens like UTYA, REDO, TONTOPIA and MTONGA became the first TON memes to cross meaningful market cap thresholds.
Not.Trade was built explicitly for that wave. Instead of just porting the Solana bot model to TON, it wrapped a web terminal around it, the kind of dashboard you would expect from a centralised exchange but pointed at jettons routed through STON.fi and DeDust. The result is a hybrid: Telegram for alerts and copy trade signals, web for charts, Memescope and detailed safety panels.
The 7-Row Head to Head Comparison
Here is the comparison most readers came for. Seven criteria, two columns, no marketing spin.
Reading the table top to bottom, you can already see the strategic split. Trojan trades surface area for speed: one chat, one workflow, no tabs. Not.Trade trades minimalism for context: a full dashboard with portfolio, rewards and live token streams sitting next to the trade panel.
Token Discovery: Filter Commands vs Memescope
The first job of any memecoin terminal is helping you find the token before everyone else. This is where the two products diverge most.
In Trojan, discovery happens inside the chat. You type commands or tap menu buttons to call up trending lists, new pair feeds and copy traded wallets. Results scroll in the Telegram thread. You scroll up to look at the last lot of new tokens, then refresh. There is a learning curve, but the upside is that everything happens in one window and the muscle memory becomes very fast.
Not.Trade exposes a different surface: the Memescope panel. The authenticated homepage shows three live columns side by side.
New Pairs
Filtered by "NEWEST", showing pairs aged in hours, not days. Real cards visible include MLS at 4h, AGENT at 10h, LOCKIN at 11h, VASYA at 11h and HIM (The Telegram Comeback) at 17h.
Use it for fresh listing snipes.
Volume 1H
Top movers by 1H, 6H and 24H volume. Real entries: TONTOPIA at $48.83K vol, DIAMOND HANDS at $10.22K, UTYA at $5.42K, MTONGA at $3.85K and TRAIN at $2.28K.
Use it to catch tokens already pumping.
Top Tokens (TRENDING)
Sustained leaders by combined activity. Visible: Yoda (Baby Yoda), UTYA, $80, INTERN (Dracula Flow), DURIKOVICH, TSHIB (TON SHIBA), REDO (Resistance Dog) and MTONGA.
Use it for momentum that lasts.
Each card carries the same anatomy: the token logo, ticker, full name (UTYA appears as "Utya," TSHIB as "TON SHIBA"), age in hours or days, social icons for X and Telegram, current USD price, market cap, a color coded MC change percentage and a quick buy button preset to ten TON. The "Recent" tag flags the very newest cards so they do not get lost in the scroll.
The implication for a trader is concrete. On Trojan you scan a list and click into one card at a time. On Not.Trade you can sit in front of three columns and watch them update simultaneously, the way a stock trader watches a watchlist of small caps. For TON, where memecoin culture is still less crowded than Solana, this density of information is part of the appeal. For an overview of the broader TON meme landscape these tokens live in, see the TON memecoins guide.
The Trade Card: One Click Sniping vs MCAP Triggered Limits
Once you have found a token, the next test is the trade card. This is where the chain economics seep into the interface.
A Trojan trade card looks like a Telegram message. You see token name, ticker, price, market cap, 5m and 1h price changes, holders, and a row of buy buttons (typically 0.5 SOL, 1 SOL, 2 SOL, 5 SOL, custom). MEV protection is a toggle. Slippage is editable. Limit orders are configured with a separate command flow: you set a target price and an amount, and the bot watches the chain for fills.
The Not.Trade trade card sits inside the token info panel of the web app. It shows the trading chart on the right, a Buy or Sell tab on the left, a Market or Limit toggle and a row of preset TON amounts. Then comes the section that does not exist on most Solana bots: the MCAP trigger.
MCAP Triggered Limit Orders
Instead of "buy when price reaches $0.000412," Not.Trade exposes a widget that reads "TRIGGER WHEN MCAP REACHES" and lets you tap quick percentage triggers: -50%, -25%, -10%, now, +10%, +25%, +50%, +100%.
Once you confirm, a "Create buy limit order" button arms the trigger. The footer of the card tracks BOUGHT, SOLD, HOLDING and PnL for that specific position.
For memecoin traders, MCAP triggers are more natural than price triggers, because the conversation in the chat is always about caps, not unit prices. "Buy UTYA at MCAP 30M" makes more sense than "Buy UTYA at $0.000037."
The trade card also shows a Buy UTYA action button (or whichever token you opened), an MEV ON toggle and an editable slippage field. To the right of those controls is a row of safety badges that we will dissect in the next section.
Insider Safety Panel: Not.Trade's Standout Feature
If you only remember one thing from this comparison, remember the Not.Trade safety panel.
Every token info screen on Not.Trade shows a row of badges with live percentages or pass or fail flags. Each badge maps to a specific rug or manipulation vector that memecoin traders learned to watch for the hard way during the 2024 Solana bull cycle.
Top 10
Percentage of supply held by the ten largest wallets. Above 30 percent is a yellow flag. Above 50 percent is a red flag for memecoins without a launchpad lock.
INSIDERS
Share of supply held by wallets connected by transaction history to the deployer. High values mean the team can dump on the chart without telegraphing it.
SNIPERS
Supply still held by wallets that bought in the first blocks. Useful to estimate sniper overhang above current price.
DEV M.
Dev movements. Tracks whether the deployer wallet is still active or has rotated. Active dev movements right before pumps are a classic exit signal.
BUNDLERS
Supply controlled by bundled multi wallet buys at launch. Big bundlers are how a team disguises insider concentration across many small addresses.
LP LOCK
Liquidity pool lock status. Locked LP means the team cannot pull liquidity in a single transaction. Critical for any TON jetton on STON.fi or DeDust.
Underneath those badges, Not.Trade also displays the total Holders count, a DEX PAID yes or no flag (whether the project paid for chart promotion on DEX listing sites) and the TAX number on buys and sells. Together, those six panels plus the metadata row give you a five second triage of any token before you even open the chart in detail.
Trojan does not bundle this scoring natively. Most Trojan power users rely on external tools like Rugcheck, DEX Screener and Solana scanners, then come back to the chat to execute. That extra hop is the trade off for the chat first interface. If you want a deeper look at why these checks matter, the fake volume detection guide covers the wash trading patterns that the safety panel is designed to surface.
TON vs Solana for Memecoins: The Chain Decision Matrix
A terminal comparison is really a chain comparison. You cannot pick Not.Trade if you do not have a reason to be on TON, and you cannot pick Trojan if you do not have a reason to be on Solana. Here is the matrix in plain terms.
The most useful insight from this matrix is the onboarding gap. On TON, the same Telegram channel that calls a memecoin is one tap away from a wallet, a buy button and Not.Trade itself. On Solana, the audience pipeline is longer: X post, click out to a chart, open Phantom, sign a transaction. That single difference, more than any feature parity argument, is why Telegram native chains are interesting for memecoins in 2026.
For traders who want to understand the TON wallet stack first, the Tonkeeper wallet guide and the TON Connect tutorial cover the two pieces that sit underneath Not.Trade. The DeDust vs STON.fi comparison covers the two routing venues that Not.Trade aggregates.
Telegram Only vs Web Plus Telegram: The Interface Tradeoff
Power users sometimes assume that more screen real estate is always better. It is not. There is a real reason serious Solana traders stay loyal to Trojan even when web based competitors exist, and that reason is speed.
A chat first interface compresses the trading decision into the smallest possible surface. You see a card, you tap a button, you confirm. There is no tab to switch, no chart to zoom in or out, no portfolio summary to glance at. For a memecoin sniper running 30 to 60 trades a day, this matters. Reducing decisions and clicks per trade is the entire game.
A web plus Telegram interface, like Not.Trade, has more switches but also more peripheral vision. You see your full portfolio while a candle is forming. You see the Memescope feed updating while you are reading the safety panel. You see your Rewards tab counter climb. For a less click intensive style, like swing positions on memecoins that survive longer than a single afternoon (UTYA, MTONGA, TSHIB, REDO), this layout is closer to a stock trader's terminal than to a sniper bot.
Not.Trade also keeps a Telegram side rail. That means alerts, fill confirmations and copy trade signals can still pop in the chat where you live. You are not forced to camp on the web tab. The web is for context, the chat is for response. This dual stack is, in practice, the strongest argument for Not.Trade over a pure Telegram bot on TON.
A Step by Step Workflow on Each Side
To make the comparison concrete, here is a step by step example of the same trade executed on both platforms. The thesis: snipe a TON SHIBA (TSHIB) style memecoin while the cap is small and set a take profit at plus 100 percent MCAP.
On Trojan (Solana proxy)
- Open
@TrojanOnSolana_botin Telegram, generate or import a Solana wallet, deposit SOL. - Paste the SPL token contract into the chat. Trojan returns a card with MC, holders, MEV toggle and buy presets.
- Tap a preset (for example 1 SOL) to execute the snipe. Confirm the transaction in chat.
- Open the limit orders menu. Set a take profit at the target price equivalent to plus 100 percent.
- Wait for fill alert in the same chat thread. Manage exit from the Position menu.
On Not.Trade (TON proxy)
- Open not.trade in a browser. Connect Tonkeeper (or the in app Telegram wallet) through TON Connect. Deposit TON.
- Use the Memescope panel. Scan New Pairs and Volume 1H for TSHIB or any similar low cap jetton. Click the card to open the token info screen.
- Triage the safety panel: confirm LP LOCK is green, Top 10 is reasonable, INSIDERS and BUNDLERS are not extreme.
- In the trade card, tap the Buy preset (10 TON), check MEV ON, confirm slippage and sign with the wallet.
- Switch to Limit, set "TRIGGER WHEN MCAP REACHES" to plus 100 percent and tap Create buy limit order to arm the take profit. Track BOUGHT, SOLD, HOLDING and PnL in the position footer.
Notice the structural symmetry. Both flows have five steps. Both end with a triggered exit. The difference is contextual: on Trojan, your eyes never leave the chat thread. On Not.Trade, your eyes move from the safety panel to the chart to the trade card to the limit trigger. For new traders, that extra context tends to slow execution but improve survival rate. For seasoned snipers, the chat is faster but unforgiving.
If you want a deeper drill on the Solana side of this comparison, the Trojan tutorial walks the exact menu structure. For the TON side, the Not.Trade complete guide covers every tab, every preset and every limit order option.
Real Token Examples From the Not.Trade Memescope
Abstract feature comparisons are easy to argue about. Real tokens are not. Here is a small tour of the actual jettons that the Not.Trade Memescope is surfacing on a typical day, with the kind of profile they have. None of this is investment advice, it is just texture for what TON memecoins look like in 2026.
UTYA (Utya)
Age 769d, 24H volume around $5K to $192K depending on the day, market cap around $36M. One of the oldest cultural memecoins on TON. Lives in the Top Tokens column on Memescope.
MTONGA
"Make TON Great Again". Age 41d, market cap around $1.53M, sustained 1H and 24H volume. Mid life memecoin that shows up across all three Memescope columns.
TSHIB (TON SHIBA)
Age 684d, market cap around $32K, 24H volume around $26K. Classic legacy meme with a known community. Often used as a "first jetton" buy by Solana migrants.
TONTOPIA
Age around 1h on capture day, $48.83K volume, market cap around $29.72K. A live example of how Memescope catches Volume 1H movers in their first hour.
INTERN (Dracula Flow)
Age 21h, 24H volume around $143K, market cap around $7.91K. Trending column resident. Volatility profile makes safety panel triage essential before buying.
$80
"$80 billion is 80 billion". Age 1d, 24H volume around $267K, market cap around $134K. A reminder that meme catalysts on TON often piggyback on numeric or cultural jokes from broader crypto Twitter.
If a Solana trader looks at this list, the equivalent mental map would be: WIF, BONK, POPCAT, MEW and the long tail of Pump.fun launches. The ecosystems do not overlap by token, they overlap by behaviour.
Honest Tradeoffs: Where Each Terminal Loses
No comparison is useful without listing the actual weaknesses of each side. Here is the brutally honest version.
Where Trojan loses
- No built in safety scoring. You rely on third party tools.
- Chat only interface is dense for new users.
- Discovery is sequential. You scroll lists, not three columns.
- Limit orders are price based, less natural for memecoin caps.
- Locked to Solana. No exposure to the Telegram native TON audience.
- Portfolio review forces extra commands or an external dashboard.
Where Not.Trade loses
- TON memecoin volume is still smaller than Solana on most days.
- Web interface requires switching contexts in and out of Telegram.
- Younger product than Trojan: smaller battle history.
- Some classical Solana plays (Pump.fun fresh mints) simply do not exist on TON.
- Newer wallet flow can intimidate users coming from Phantom.
- Fewer copy trade leaderboards than Solana ecosystems offer today.
Stating these tradeoffs openly is part of the long term value of these tools. A platform that pretends it has no weaknesses is a platform that has not been used at scale. Both Trojan and Not.Trade have been used at scale, on their respective chains, by traders who burn out quickly when something is broken.
Which Terminal Fits Which Trader
Strip the marketing away and the choice between Not.Trade and Trojan comes down to four trader archetypes.
The Solana memecoin sniper
Lives on Pump.fun launches, runs 50 plus trades a day, trusts chat workflows. Trojan stays the right answer. Adding a TON workflow on top is interesting, not urgent.
The TON native trader
Already inside Telegram communities, already holding TON or USDT on TON, already curious about UTYA and MTONGA. Not.Trade is the default. The web dashboard plus the Telegram rail is exactly the right shape.
The multi chain professional
Runs Solana sniper bots, Ethereum DEX terminals and now wants TON. The right answer is both. Use Trojan for Solana, use Not.Trade for TON, keep portfolio reconciliation outside (or partly inside Not.Trade's Portfolio tab).
The cautious memecoin tourist
Wants to experiment without going head first into chat sniping. Not.Trade's safety panel and visual layout reduce mistakes. The MCAP based limit orders match the way casual traders think about caps.
A Migration Path: From Solana Trojan to TON Not.Trade
For Solana traders who want to test the TON side without abandoning their main stack, here is a sane migration sequence.
First, set up a TON wallet. Most readers should use Tonkeeper. It is the closest TON equivalent to Phantom in terms of usability and is now ubiquitous in TON wallet flows. The Tonkeeper guide walks through the seed phrase backup and the in app jetton list.
Second, fund the wallet. You can bridge USDT on TON from an exchange that supports the TON network (Bybit, OKX, MEXC). The USDT on TON guide explains why network selection matters and how to avoid sending to the wrong rail.
Third, connect Not.Trade. Use TON Connect to authorise the dashboard against your Tonkeeper. The platform never holds your keys, the wallet signs each transaction in real time. To understand the protocol layer underneath, see the TON Connect guide.
Fourth, do not start with snipes. Start with a known legacy jetton from the Trending column (UTYA, REDO, TSHIB), use ten or twenty TON, run the buy and the limit sell at plus 25 percent MCAP. The goal is to learn the interface on a low risk position, not to chase a launch.
Fifth, only once you are comfortable with the trade card and the safety panel, move into the New Pairs column. Pair that with the best TON trading bots guide for an overview of the broader ecosystem you are stepping into.
Sixth, and this is the part many Solana migrants forget, do an address poisoning check before pasting any contract. The address poisoning guide explains how attackers seed lookalike addresses into your transaction history, and why the cleaner UI of Not.Trade does not exempt you from that risk.
Routing, Fees and the STON.fi plus DeDust Question
A small but important note for readers who care about execution quality.
On Solana, Trojan routes through the open liquidity stack with Jupiter as a frequent aggregator and Raydium or Meteora as venues. Slippage and MEV are managed inside Trojan with the MEV protection toggle plus user defined slippage tolerance.
On TON, Not.Trade routes across STON.fi and DeDust. These are the two dominant TON decentralised exchanges and they often have different pools for the same jetton. The terminal abstracts that choice for you, but it is worth understanding the difference. If you want to dig into how the two compare on liquidity depth, fee structure and pool design, the DeDust vs STON.fi comparison covers it in depth. For broader context on what jettons are and how they differ from SPL tokens, the jettons standard guide is the right starting point.
Either way, the fee per swap on both Trojan and Not.Trade is a meaningful number once you start running dozens of trades a week. A 0.9 percent swap fee compounds. On large positions, build that into your take profit threshold. On a memecoin you intend to ride to plus 100 percent or beyond, the fee is noise. On a scalp at plus 10 percent, the fee is half your edge.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q Is Not.Trade just a TON copy of Trojan, or is it a different product?
Not.Trade shares the same workflow vocabulary as Trojan (token discovery, sniping, limit orders, multi wallet) but it is not a port. It runs as a full web dashboard with a Memescope panel, a Tracker, a Portfolio tab and a Rewards section, and it adds MCAP based limit orders and a built in safety scoring panel that Trojan does not natively offer.
Q Can I use Trojan to trade TON jettons or Not.Trade to trade Solana memecoins?
No. Trojan is Solana native and only routes through Solana DEX venues like Raydium and Pump.fun. Not.Trade is TON native and only routes through STON.fi and DeDust on jettons. They are not cross chain terminals. Most serious traders run both on different chains and reconcile portfolios manually.
Q What does the Not.Trade safety panel actually check?
Six categories: Top 10 wallet concentration, INSIDERS connected to the deployer, SNIPERS holding from the first blocks, DEV M. (dev movements on the deployer wallet), BUNDLERS (multi wallet bundled launch buys) and LP LOCK status. Combined with Holders count, DEX PAID flag and TAX rate, they give a one screen triage of any jetton before you buy.
Q Why does Not.Trade use MCAP triggers instead of price triggers for limit orders?
Memecoin traders think in caps, not in unit prices. A jetton priced at 0.0000037 dollars is hard to reason about, but a 36 million dollar market cap on UTYA is concrete. MCAP triggers let you say "buy more when MCAP drops 25 percent" or "take profit at MCAP plus 100 percent" using the quick presets, which matches how memecoin conversations actually happen.
Q Which TON memecoins should I look at first on Not.Trade?
For learning the interface, start with established legacy jettons that appear in the Trending column: UTYA (Utya), REDO (Resistance Dog), TSHIB (TON SHIBA), MTONGA (Make TON Great Again) and Yoda (Baby Yoda). For active 1H trading, watch the Volume 1H column for movers like TONTOPIA, INTERN (Dracula Flow) and $80. This is not financial advice, just where to point your eyes inside Memescope.
Q How does the fee model compare between Trojan and Not.Trade?
Trojan settled around a 0.9 percent fee per swap on Solana. Not.Trade applies a comparable percentage range on jetton swaps. Verify the exact figure in the platform settings before sizing positions. On both terminals, fees compound aggressively across high frequency trading, so set take profit thresholds with the fee already in mind.
Q Is TON safer than Solana for memecoin trading?
Neither chain is intrinsically safer for memecoins. The risks are the same: rug pulls, sniper concentration, dev wallet dumps, fake volume and bundled launches. What changes is the tooling. Not.Trade exposes more native safety scoring on TON jettons through the Top 10, INSIDERS, SNIPERS, DEV M., BUNDLERS and LP LOCK panel, while Solana traders typically combine Trojan execution with third party scanners.
Q Does Not.Trade have copy trading like Trojan?
Not.Trade includes a Tracker tab dedicated to following wallets and a Rewards program that ties into multi wallet activity. The Solana copy trade scene around Trojan is currently denser, with established leaderboards, but the TON side is catching up as more public wallets become identifiable through the Tracker.
Q Which wallet should I use with Not.Trade?
Tonkeeper is the most common pairing, connected through TON Connect. The Telegram in app wallet also works for users who prefer staying inside the messenger. MyTonWallet is a third option. None of these wallets give up custody of your seed phrase to Not.Trade itself, the terminal only requests signatures for each transaction.
Q What does the 10 TON quick buy button do on Memescope cards?
Every token card in the Memescope panel shows a quick buy preset, typically ten TON. Tapping it opens a one click buy flow against that token using your default slippage and MEV settings. It is designed for fast snipes during high frequency Memescope scanning, the equivalent of Trojan's preset SOL buy buttons.
Q Should I migrate fully from Trojan to Not.Trade?
Almost never. The realistic stance is to keep Trojan as your Solana terminal and add Not.Trade as your TON terminal. They are complementary tools, not substitutes. The opportunity in 2026 is to be present on both chains rather than to pick a side. Reconcile the two stacks through your wallet and PnL tracking discipline.
Conclusion: Two Chains, Two Terminals, One Strategy
The smartest way to read this comparison is not as a fight. Trojan and Not.Trade do not threaten each other. They serve two parallel ecosystems that are both growing faster than most non memecoin sectors of crypto. Solana keeps producing high frequency launches with deep cultural reach. TON keeps converting Telegram audience into onchain users at a friction level no other chain matches.
If you are already on Solana, Trojan is the proven tool. Keep it. Layer Not.Trade on top to access the TON memecoin tape, the real time Memescope view of UTYA, MTONGA, TSHIB, TONTOPIA, INTERN and $80, the MCAP triggered limit orders and the safety panel that gives you Top 10, INSIDERS, SNIPERS, DEV M., BUNDLERS and LP LOCK in one glance. If you are starting fresh in 2026 and you live inside Telegram, Not.Trade is the more humane entry point.
For deeper context on the specific tools mentioned across this article, the Not.Trade complete guide is the canonical reference on the TON terminal side. The Trojan tutorial covers the Solana sniper workflow. The best TON trading bots guide situates Not.Trade inside the broader TON terminal landscape. Together, those three articles plus this comparison should give you a complete map of where memecoin trading sits at the midpoint of 2026.
Trade carefully. Verify every contract. Use the safety panel when you have it. And remember that the best terminal is always the one whose interface you have already internalised, because in a memecoin trade the difference between a clean exit and a slow rug is usually measured in seconds, not in features.
Related Guides
- Not.Trade vs Photon: TON vs Solana Web Terminals 2026
- Top 3 TON Trading Terminals 2026: Not.Trade vs STON.fi vs DeDust
- Not.Trade vs BonkBot: TON vs Solana Memecoin Battle 2026
- Trojan Bot Tutorial 2026: Snipe & Copy Trade Solana Easily
- TON Terminal: Complete Guide to Not.Trade - The Fastest TON Trading App (2026)