Token Dynamics
1. General Details (Last Updated May 6, 2025)
Supply
Total Supply: The maximum number of WKC tokens ever created — 1 quadrillion (1,000,000,000,000,000).
Circulating Supply: The portion of tokens currently in public hands and available for trading — 550 trillion WKC. The rest may be locked, burned, or held by the team.
Burned Supply: Tokens that have been permanently removed from circulation.
Manual Burn: 300 trillion WKC intentionally destroyed by the team at creation
Auto Burn: 147 trillion WKC automatically destroyed through programmed tokenomics.
Total Burnt: Combined total of manually and automatically burned tokens — 447 trillion.
Liquidity (As at 6 March, 2025)
Primary Liquidity Pool is on PancakeSwap with major share on (WKC/BNB pair)
Total Liquidity: The combined value of both assets locked in the pool to enable decentralized trading. Current Total: $412,000
Liquidity Split: PancakeSwap uses a 50/50 model for automated market makers (AMMs), so the pool is balanced equally between:
BNB Value: $206,000 worth of Binance Coin (BNB)
WKC Value: $206,000 worth of Wiki Cat (WKC) tokens
WKC in Liquidity Pool (LP): The number of WKC tokens currently paired with BNB in the pool. Amount: 14 trillion WKC
2. How PancakeSwap Works
Wiki Cat trades on PancakeSwap, a decentralized exchange that uses the Automated Market Maker (AMM) model.
What Happens When People Buy Wiki Cat?
When users buy WKC, they deposit BNB into the pool and receive WKC in return.
This reduces the WKC balance and increases the BNB balance in the pool.
Due to the AMM model, the price of WKC increases as more are bought.
The more people buy, the steeper the price climbs (slippage rises with large buys).
3. Buy Impact on Price
As more WKC is bought, the token supply in the pool reduces, and the price rises exponentially.
Example Price Impact (Simulated)
$1,000
~67B WKC
~2%
$10,000
~591B WKC
~25%
$100,000
~3.9T WKC
~184%
$1,000,000
~8.6T WKC
~480%+
Note: Buying $1M worth of WKC at current market cap ($7.8M) and Liquidity of $412K would push the token price up significantly (Very inefficient with current liquidity)
4. Can Someone Buy the Entire Supply?
No.
The circulating supply is currently 550 trillion.
Only 14 trillion WKC are in the PancakeSwap liquidity pool.
Buying all 14 trillion would cause exponential price increases.
AMM math makes it practically impossible (and extremely expensive) to "drain" the supply.
5. Can Someone Buy $1M Worth of WKC Right Now?
Not efficiently.
The pool has only $412,000 in total liquidity.
A $1M buy would dramatically distort price, delivering far fewer tokens than expected.
Most of the $1M would go toward pushing the price up, not buying more WKC.
Solution: Use Dollar-Cost Averaging (DCA), OTC deals, or wait for increased liquidity.
6. What Makes WKC Price Go Up?
Buyer Demand: Every buy removes WKC from the Liquidity pool and raises the price.
Burns: Reducing supply (like the 447T burned so far) makes tokens scarcer.
Liquidity Growth: Deeper liquidity pools enable large trades with less slippage.
Utility: Real-world use, staking, governance, etc. drive organic demand.
Community Hype & Listings: CEX listings and viral interest increase external demand.
7. What Happens When an Exchange Lists Wiki Cat?
1. They Create a New Market
The exchange sets up a trading pair, usually WKC/USDT or WKC/BTC.
This is completely separate from PancakeSwap’s AMM pool.
Prices may align initially with the PancakeSwap price but will diverge based on supply/demand on the CEX.
2. Liquidity Is Supplied
To operate the new market, the exchange needs initial liquidity:
Either Wiki Cat team or a liquidity provider (market maker) sends a large amount of WKC to the exchange.
An equivalent amount of USDT, BTC, or other base currencies is also deposited.
This inventory funds buy/sell orders so that users can begin trading immediately.
Some exchanges require the project to provide both WKC and quote currency (USDT, etc.) for listing.
3. Market Making Begins
Exchanges rely on market makers (bots or professionals) to provide order book depth.
These actors place buy and sell limit orders to ensure traders can transact with minimal slippage.
Market makers often:
Mirror price movements from PancakeSwap.
Profit off spreads (buy low, sell high).
Prevent extreme volatility.
4. Price Discovery
The price on the CEX is set by limit orders and trade volume, not AMM math.
It can diverge from PancakeSwap due to arbitrage or isolated demand.
Arbitrage traders will often buy WKC where it's cheaper and sell it where it's more expensive, which stabilizes the price across platforms.
5. Trading Volume Increases
A CEX listing usually results in:
Increased exposure
Easier access (especially for non-crypto-savvy users)
Higher volume and liquidity
Reduced dependency on DEXs
Key Implication of Listing for Wiki Cat
Listings bring more eyeballs, more volume, and price action.
But they also require strategic liquidity management — thin liquidity can lead to erratic price moves or trader frustration.
If done right, CEX listings can act as fuel for massive adoption.
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