The protocol's expansion engine

OPOS turns volume into new revenue streams.

Every OPOS transfer pays a 1% tax. That tax is used to add new liquidity pairs against other coins — and every new pair is another arbitrage surface that pays the protocol every time price moves. The more OPOS volume happens, the more pairs the protocol owns, the more arbitrage revenue flows in. Forever.

Mint ratio
1 : 1M
BTB → OPOS
Transfer tax
1%
to LP expansion
OPOS supply
circulating
Why it grows the protocol

Each new pair OPOS opens — say OPOS / random-coin-X — becomes an arbitrage surface. As X moves against the broader market, bots arb the OPOS pair to keep it in line, paying the 1% tax on every trade.

Operating note

Minimum mint is 1 BTB. Minimum burn is 1,000,000 OPOS. Use whole ratios to avoid rounding rejections.

The OPOS flywheel

Transfers fund pairs. Pairs fund the protocol.

OPOS is not just a token — it's an engine for building protocol-owned liquidity across the whole DEX ecosystem.

01

User mints OPOS from BTB

1 BTB → 1,000,000 OPOS. The BTB sits as backing; OPOS now exists as a tradeable asset.

02

OPOS gets traded → 1% tax

Every transfer takes a 1% cut. The tax accumulates inside the contract as OPOS itself.

03

Tax → new LP against another coin

The accumulated OPOS is paired with another coin on Uniswap, opening a new market that the protocol now owns the LP of.

04

Arbitrage on that pair pays us forever

Every arb trade hits the 1% transfer tax again. Loop the cycle across hundreds of pairs and the revenue compounds.

Supply console

Convert between BTB and OPOS.

You send BTB
BTB
You receive OPOS
0.0
OPOS
Connect your wallet to use OPOS.
Mint OPOS

Lock at least 1 BTB to receive 1,000,000 OPOS per BTB. Your BTB stays as backing inside the contract — burn whole-million OPOS chunks any time to redeem it.

Wallet snapshot
Your BTB
Your OPOS
See where the rewards land