Mini-app launch playbook — Hamster, Catizen, Blum patterns
How successful Telegram mini-apps go from zero to millions — proven 5-stage playbook used by Catizen, Blum, MemeFi.
8 min · updated 2026-05-17
Top mini-apps (Hamster Kombat, Notcoin, Catizen, Blum, MemeFi) reach millions of users using a remarkably consistent playbook. This article breaks down the five stages.
#Stage 1 — bot + mini-app set-up
Register a bot via **@BotFather**, then set its main app via the Mini-Apps menu. Pre-launch checklist:
- Bot username with category fit (e.g. /...gamebot for games)
- Main-app URL pointing to your hosted mini-app
- Description + screenshots + privacy policy
- Language + region settings
- Telegram Stars / TON wallet connection if monetised
This is mechanical work; expect 1–2 days for the first iteration including QA.
#Stage 2 — App Center submission
The Telegram **App Center** is the discovery surface inside the Telegram client. Submission categories: Gaming, Social, Finance, Tools, Productivity, Entertainment. Pick the category that matches your dominant use case — fitness apps in Productivity perform worse than in Tools.
App Center ranking factors (inferred from observed behaviour):
- Daily active install velocity
- Stars Promotions paid-boost
- Session length × frequency
- Internal share-rate (users inviting via referral)
You cannot pay your way to the top of App Center directly, but Stars Promotions amplify the organic signal.
#Stage 3 — seed-user acquisition
The first 1K–10K users are critical because their behaviour calibrates Telegram's recommendation engine. Two patterns:
**Pattern A: in-network referral** — leverage existing Telegram channels/communities. Hamster Kombat did this via Telegram OG-channel network, getting 1M users in week 1 from referrals alone.
**Pattern B: paid Telegram Ads** — run EUR-cabinet creatives in matching topic-channels, with mini-app deep-link as the CTA. Catizen used this with ≈€50K for first 100K users.
Most launches mix both. Pure paid is more expensive; pure organic is slower.
#Stage 4 — Stars Promotions amplification
Once you have 10K+ users with positive engagement signals (D1 retention >20 %), turn on Stars Promotions to amplify. Stars boost the App Center ranking, surfacing your mini-app to organic browsers.
Typical Stars-spend at this stage: ≈100K–500K Stars over 30 days ($1.3K–6.5K). The 10x compound effect is what gets you from 10K to 100K users.
#Stage 5 — cabinet retargeting
After 100K users, you have enough first-party data to build retention loops:
- **Re-engagement messages** via Telegram bot to dormant users
- **TON cabinet retargeting** for crypto-savvy cohort if applicable
- **EUR cabinet broad** for international expansion
- **Influencer + channel-partner deals** for lateral growth
This is where unit economics become real. If LTV × retention > acquisition cost, scale up paid spend by 5x. If not, fix the product before spending more.
#What kills mini-apps
Three common failure modes:
1. **No tutorial** — users open mini-app, don't understand it in 10 seconds, close forever. Catizen famously has 3-screen tutorial that loops if skipped.
2. **No share mechanism** — no referral bonus = no viral coefficient. Hamster Kombat referral was 10K coins per friend = huge K-factor.
3. **Wrong monetisation timing** — Stars/ads launched before retention proven. Drives early-cohort burn. Wait until D7 retention >15 % before monetising.
#Spy on competitors first
The Telegram Ads Spy bot directory tracks every mini-app launch — see what ads they ran, which channels they targeted, when they pivoted. The public leaderboard at topapps.tg shows current MAU ranking; the editorial picks at bestapps.tg show what is actually well-built (different signals from raw MAU).
#When to hire help
Mini-app launches are operationally heavy — 3–5 cabinets running in parallel, daily creative rotation, App Center optimization. If your media budget is €20K+/month, hire an agency. G.Media Agency ran Catizen, Blum, MemeFi — book a 20-minute strategy call.