Solana Chameleon $CHAM
40
PumpScore 40/100 Grade D
Solana Chameleon earns a 40/100 PumpScore (Grade D). Launched 2 hours ago on Pump.fun, CHAM pairs $- of liquidity with $6.7K of 24h trading - thin depth for a token this young.
Score breakdown
Its standout signal is price stability at 100/100; the softest is liquidity depth at 0/100, which keeps the overall grade where it is.
Liquidity depth0
Liquidity vs market cap0
24h trading volume59
Healthy turnover100
Buy / sell balance98
Trade participation81
Survival time5
Market-cap tier21
Price stability100
Volume vs liquidity0
Price
$0.00000219
Market Cap
$2.2K
24h Volume
$6.7K
Liquidity
$-
24h Change
-5.39%
24h Buys / Sells
95 / 81
Tip Low on trading activity? Many Solana creators use a Pump.fun trending bot to build steady volume and chase King of the Hill.
About Solana Chameleon
Paint. Hide. Survive. Earn SOL. The on-chain hide & seek
Contract
Fsp33kEQCPrakMF5DxvaMjHqpqXPNixi29GXNV4Cpump
Frequently asked questions
What score does Solana Chameleon have?
Solana Chameleon (CHAM) has a PumpScore of 40/100 - Grade D, weak - as of Jul 12, 2026 18:30. The rating is built from 10 live on-chain signals such as liquidity, volume, buy/sell balance and survival time.
Should I buy Solana Chameleon?
This page is data, not a recommendation. The CHAM 40/100 reflects current structure, which can change fast. Do your own research before trading Solana Chameleon.
What drives the CHAM PumpScore?
Solana Chameleon 40/100 is led by price stability (100/100) and held back by liquidity depth (0/100). The full breakdown of every signal is shown above.
Is CHAM liquid enough to trade?
Solana Chameleon holds $- of liquidity - thin for a token this new. Liquidity versus market cap is one of the heaviest factors in its 40/100 score, since thin pools are easy to drain.
Is CHAM a rug pull?
PumpScore measures market structure, not intent, so it cannot certify safety. Solana Chameleon is only 2 hours old, its score is 40/100 (weak), and new Pump.fun tokens are extremely high risk. Verify the contract on Solscan and do your own research.