
In the current market environment, the entire crypto market's thirst for "mechanism innovation" projects has reached an almost frenzied level. Compared to meme projects that relied solely on narratives, KOLs, or community sentiment in the past, market funds are increasingly willing to pay for "new operating logic" and "new asset structures."
With virtually no pre-launch hype and only an official website, Sato has become a hot topic in the crypto community over the past few days: In just four days since its launch, Sato's market capitalization briefly approached $40 million, and has since stabilized at $25 million. Odaily will provide a detailed explanation of Sato's underlying operating mechanisms in this article.

What exactly is sato?
Sato is an ERC-20 token deployed on Ethereum, with its core mechanism built on Uniswap v4 Hook. Sato has no pre-mining, no team allocation, no administrator privileges, and no upgrade or pause functions; the entire system runs automatically through on-chain code.
Sato is issued using a Bonding Curve. After a user pays ETH to the Hook contract, the system automatically mines new sato according to a fixed mathematical formula. As the amount of ETH accumulated in the system increases, the subsequent purchase price will rise. All ETH will be permanently retained in the Hook as a system reserve.
When selling, users can sell their Sato back to the system in exchange for ETH. Once the total supply of Sato tokens in Mint reaches 99%, the sold Sato will be destroyed and will not re-enter the market. The system charges a 0.3% transaction fee for both buying and selling, and this fee is permanently stored in the Hook and cannot be withdrawn by anyone.
The theoretical supply of sato is 21 million, but the system will permanently stop mint when it reaches 99% of the supply, or 20.79 million. After the issuance stops, users will no longer be able to buy new coins through Curve, but they can still sell sato back to the system for ETH. Curve will continue to exist as a permanent on-chain buyback pool.
Sato's core mechanism
The Sato mechanism is somewhat similar to a variation of Pump.fun's Bonding Curve model, but it's more extreme. In Sato, users also purchase tokens from the system through Curves, but unlike traditional Bonding Curve projects, Sato explicitly divides the entire system into an "issuance phase" and an "external trading phase."
Phase 1: Issuance Phase
During this phase, users are not trading with other holders, but directly with the system itself. After a user deposits ETH into the system, Curve automatically mints new sato according to a fixed formula. As more and more ETH accumulates in the system, the subsequent mint price will also increase.
In a sense, this stage is more like an automatically running "internal system," where Curve is responsible for both issuing tokens and setting prices.

Phase Two: The External Market Phase
Once the supply of sato reaches 99% of the set total limit, the system will permanently stop mint , and users will no longer be able to purchase sato from the system through Curve. At this point, sato will begin to circulate in secondary markets such as Uniswap, and the price will no longer be determined by the Curve formula, but will instead be determined by market buying and selling.
However, Curve itself will not disappear. Although the system has stopped issuing tokens, it still retains the "repurchase" function. Users can still sell their sato back to the system for ETH, and the sold sato will be directly destroyed and will not re-enter the market . In a sense, Curve will transform from an "issuance system" into a permanent on-chain buyback pool. The operating logic of sato can actually be understood as a process of "gradually transitioning from an internal market to an external market".
Sato: Reconstructing Digital Scarcity
What truly attracts the market to Sato is not just the Bonding Curve, Hook, or deflation mechanism itself, but its attempt to retell the story of "digital scarcity."
Bitcoin established a consensus as digital gold through its fixed supply and high creation costs. Sato attempts to replicate this logic on Ethereum. The difference is that Bitcoin's issuance is achieved through energy consumption; Sato, on the other hand, chooses to directly deposit all costs into the system's reserves. Each Sato corresponds to an actual amount of ETH entering the system.
This is why Sato is considered by many to be a very "sexy" on-chain experiment. It combines the scarcity and late-stage acceleration of Bonding Curve with the composability and liquidity of the Ethereum ecosystem. There is no pre-mining, no team control, no administrator privileges, and even the operational logic after the Curve ends has been pre-written onto the chain.
Whether this model can ultimately form a long-term consensus similar to Bitcoin remains to be seen, and the market may need time to verify. But at least for now, Sato is no longer just an ordinary Ponzi scheme, but more like an experiment on "Ethereum's native scarce assets."






