Coincraft is architecture-led protocol work, not staff augmentation. It is for teams that need the economy, contracts, liquidity, governance, frontend, and audit path to make sense as one system.
Some teams need the original Coincraft depth: economic architecture before code. Some need a frozen spec. Some need the whole build. Some arrive with a broken system that needs to be rescued before it can be secured.
Engagements begin through one of four doors.
Coincraft began with the work most teams skip too quickly: understanding the economic machine before anyone builds it.
Token flows. Incentive loops. Governance mechanics. Liquidity strategy. Vesting. Simulations. Protocol roles. Incentive design. Risk surfaces.
Today, that same pre-build work remains the foundation.
That pre-build work can now continue into the frozen spec, contract system, testnet deployment, investor frontend, and security-review package.
These are doors, not tiers. Every engagement is scoped to the protocol in front of it, and the first conversation determines which door makes sense. Output lists are illustrative, not package promises.
For founders who need the original Coincraft depth.
Your concept, token economy, incentive system, or protocol architecture is reviewed from first principles.
This is where the architecture becomes coherent before the build begins.
Best for
What happens
Coincraft reviews the protocol idea, economic flows, roles, incentives, governance, liquidity design, risks, and intended user behavior. The work may include mechanism design, token-flow mapping, vesting review, simulations, incentive stress tests, architecture diagnosis, and recommendations on what should or should not be built.
What comes out
A clear architecture direction. Outputs may include an economic architecture memo, mechanism map, incentive diagnosis, risk surface, simulation notes, recommended build path, spec-readiness assessment — and “do not build this yet” warnings where needed.
Clarity can stand alone. It can also lead into a Spec Freeze Sprint if the system is ready to become buildable.
The upgraded version of the old Coincraft handoff.
Your protocol is taken from concept, rough design, or prior architecture into a frozen, build-ready specification.
A spec freeze exists to remove ambiguity before production code begins.
Best for
What happens
Coincraft turns the economic design into a technical system. The spec defines core assets and roles, contract boundaries, permissions, lifecycle states, the mint, burn, stake, vote, route, bridge, redeem, and claim flows, economic assumptions, incentive mechanics, integration points, invariants, edge cases, failure modes, security-sensitive areas — and what should not be built.
The spec is reviewed adversarially before it becomes the source of truth.
What comes out
A frozen protocol specification that a builder, CTO, investor, or security reviewer can pick up cold. Outputs may include the build-ready architecture spec, contract map, role and permission map, economic flow diagrams, invariant list, risk register, implementation plan, audit-prep notes, and the open-questions and ruling log.
Spec Freeze can hand off to your internal team. Or Coincraft can carry it into an Audit-Ready Testnet Build.
The frozen spec becomes a working, reviewable protocol system.
Coincraft takes the frozen spec into implementation: contracts, tests, adversarial review, refactor cycles, deployment, frontend, runbooks, and audit handoff package.
The frozen spec becomes a reviewable protocol system before the third-party audit begins.
Best for
What happens
Coincraft carries the system from frozen spec to working testnet. The work can include smart contract implementation, test suite development, invariant and fuzz testing where appropriate, multi-model adversarial review, findings-ledger management, refactor and remediation rounds, deployment scripts, testnet deployment, the cross-chain wiring ceremony where needed, a dashboard or investor frontend, runbooks and handoff documents, and security-review package preparation.
What comes out
A protocol package prepared for serious review. Outputs may include the contract system, test suite, invariant output, findings ledger, deployment map, testnet deployment, investor-ready frontend, runbooks, known-risk register, audit handoff package, and weekly artifact-linked build reports.
Your CTO and internal security team can review the system in depth. Then the protocol can go to an independent third-party security firm. Coincraft can support the handoff and remediation process, but does not sell audits.
For protocols already in trouble.
Existing codebase. Confused tokenomics. Failed handoffs. Audit fear. Fragile incentives. Architecture that no longer matches the product.
A rescue engagement starts by stopping the drift: diagnose, simplify, and rebuild the part that matters.
Best for
What happens
Coincraft reviews from architecture down. The review asks: What is the protocol actually trying to do? Which economic assumptions are still valid? Which contracts should survive? Which mechanisms are dangerous or unnecessary? What is impossible to audit in its current form? What should be retired, what should be rebuilt — and what should never have been built?
What comes out
A path back to a coherent system. Outputs may include an architecture diagnosis, tokenomics-code mismatch review, risk map, rewrite plan, retired-component list, rebuilt spec, refactored contracts, testnet redeployment, and an audit-ready handoff package.
Rescue can become a Spec Freeze Sprint, a partial rebuild, or a full Audit-Ready Testnet Build. The goal is to protect the protocol, not preserve sunk cost.
Every engagement runs on a simple cadence.
The weekly call reviews decisions, open questions, risks, completed work, and next build targets.
You receive a written report generated from the actual work: timestamped, artifact-linked, and tied to the current state of the spec or build.
The spec is the ruling document. If the architecture changes, the spec changes. If the spec changes, the build changes.
Issues are tracked, reviewed, remediated, accepted, or explicitly carried forward. Nothing important disappears into chat history.
A Coincraft engagement can produce:
It arrives as a system your CTO, internal security team, investors, and external auditor can inspect — not a pile of files.
Coincraft prepares protocols for serious review and does not sell audits.
I build and prepare the system; I do not replace the auditor.
A protocol is an economy, a permission system, a liquidity machine, a governance surface, a user interface, a deployment ceremony, and an audit path.
When those pieces are designed separately, founders pay for the handoff gap later.
Coincraft is expensive because it absorbs the work that usually gets split across a token economist, protocol architect, senior Solidity team, technical PM, frontend team, deployment engineer, and audit-prep process.
The real value is continuity, not headcount replacement.
The same architectural mind that defines the economic machine carries it into the system your team can review.
Since founding Coincraft in 2022, Austin has shaped token economies and Web3 systems for 50+ companies — from full protocol architecture to vesting design, simulations, incentive mechanics, and economic review.
Prior work includes teams and projects such as Heale, Kino, Pangea, Anyone Protocol, Altcoinist, Ready Games (later Play Network), Entangle, and ZeroLend.
The original work was pre-build economic architecture; the new work carries that architecture through execution.
Send the project stage, chain targets, timeline, and codebase status.
austin@coincraft.buildIf there is fit, the first conversation determines which door makes sense: Clarity, Spec Freeze, Audit-Ready Testnet Build, or Rescue.