Operators fund campaigns
Licensed operators reserve TFL to create acquisition, retention, and jackpot campaigns with transparent budgets.
/ iGaming prize liquidity
A regulated prize network where operators buy campaign inventory, players enter lottery-style moments, and token demand is tied to real iGaming utility instead of hype.
/ business under the token
The first product should be a B2B prize engine: operators pay for measurable player moments, not speculative attention. TFL becomes the unit of inventory, entry, reserve, and settlement.
Licensed operators reserve TFL to create acquisition, retention, and jackpot campaigns with transparent budgets.
Eligible players receive or spend TFL tickets for daily draws, missions, tournaments, and jackpot entries.
Ticket minting, campaign setup, settlement fees, and partner staking create recurring demand for the token.
A policy-governed treasury can fund prizes, market liquidity, audits, and discretionary token programs.
/ token mechanics
I would avoid launching TFL as a pure casino coin. The stronger path is a prize liquidity protocol with transparent campaign accounting, audited draws, and visible token sinks that only activate when usage exists.
/ launch sequence
Pilot with one licensed operator and free-to-play prize campaigns
Launch TFL campaign dashboard for operators and affiliates
Introduce paid ticket mechanics only where licensing allows
Open jackpot liquidity programs after audit and treasury policy approval
/ responsible launch
TFL prize products should be offered only where lawful, with age checks, responsible-gaming controls, AML screening where required, and clear prize terms. Token programs are policy-dependent and should be presented as utility mechanics, not as return products.