What Kind of Ideas Can Be Launched?

Any idea. Literally.

Spark is not limited to one category, one industry, or one type of product. If you can describe it, you can launch it.

The most natural fit is future startups: products, protocols, tools, or services that a team could build during a hackathon. But Spark doesn't gatekeep what qualifies as a "good idea." There are no bad ideas on Spark. There's only the market.

If investors fund it, it's validated. If they don't, it's not. Simple as that.

No committee. No jury. No application form. The market decides.

Examples of ideas that could be launched

Think broadly. Crypto or not, tech or not. A new DeFi primitive, an AI agent for a specific task, a consumer app, a developer tool, a video game, a sneaker brand, a hardware device, a media platform, a DAO tooling suite, a food delivery concept, a fitness wearable, a music label, an e-commerce brand. If someone believes in it enough to fund it, it belongs on Spark.

You don't need a team

That's the whole point. You submit the idea. Spark organizes a hackathon around it. Builders compete to execute it. The community picks the winner through decision markets.

You don't need to know how to code. You don't need a co-founder. You just need a vision.

What the ideator gets

If your idea gets funded and the Ownership Coin is launched, you earn 10% of all trading fees generated by that token, forever. That's not a one-time reward. As long as the token is being traded, you earn.

You also get a guaranteed allocation slot in the raise (10% of the hard cap), so you can invest in your own idea alongside the community.

In short: submit a great idea, and Spark makes sure you're rewarded for it, permanently.

The market is the filter

Spark doesn't decide which ideas are good. The market does. If an idea attracts enough capital to hit its minimum funding goal, it moves forward. If it doesn't, participants are fully refunded. Zero loss.

This is the purest form of validation: people putting real money behind a future they want to see built.