Robinhood Chain Trading, Now in Your Pocket: Banana Gun’s Telegram Bot

Banana Gun went live on Robinhood’s new blockchain the day it launched. No waiting period, no beta gate, no separate app to download.

It all happens on your phone. Banana Gun lives inside Telegram, so you buy, set limit orders, and copy trades on the Robinhood chain from the same chat app you already carry everywhere.

Showing up first on a new chain often means keeping the trading volume once things settle. By the end of this piece, you will know exactly what shipped on day one, and why Banana Gun called that launch a floor, not a finish line.

What day-one support on the Robinhood chain actually means

Most trading tools take weeks to catch up on a new chain. Banana Gun skipped that lag.

Traders on the Robinhood chain could place orders through the Banana Gun Telegram bot from launch day, using the same interface they already knew from other networks.

The company’s own framing put it plainly: day one support was just the start.

Why a Telegram bot matters for a new chain launch

Banana Gun runs entirely inside Telegram. You place market buys, set limit orders, and copy trades from the same chat app already on your phone.

There is no desktop client to open, no browser extension to install, no separate dApp to connect a wallet to. The bot lives where your phone already is.

That matters most in the minutes after a new chain goes live. You can act on a fresh Robinhood-chain pair the moment it launches, from a subway platform, a work desk, or a couch, without switching devices or apps.

Market buys and limit orders land inside Telegram

Two features carried the most weight for Robinhood chain traders on launch day: market buys and limit orders.

A market buy gets you into a position at the current price the moment you send the command.

A limit order works differently. You set a target price, walk away, and the bot executes once the market reaches it.

That distinction matters most during the volatile first days of a brand-new chain, when prices swing fast and manual reaction is unrealistic for most traders.

Copy trading gives new-chain traders a shortcut

New chains are unpredictable by nature. Wallet activity is thin and price history barely exists.

Copy trading changes that math. You can mirror the positions of wallets you choose to follow, directly on the Robinhood chain, instead of guessing blind.

Faster execution on a thin, fast-moving market

New chains attract concentrated early volume. Liquidity pools start small, and slippage risk runs higher than on an established chain.

Banana Gun built its reputation on execution speed across its other supported chains, and that speed carries over to the Robinhood chain.

Day 1 support was just the start

Market buys, limit orders, copy trading, and faster execution all shipped together on day one, a wider feature set than most tools manage at any point after a new chain launches.

Tools that show up first on a new chain, then keep building on it, tend to become the default choice once trading volume settles into a routine.