

Penasta
12K posts

@Penasta
𝗖𝗢𝗡𝗧𝗘𝗡𝗧 𝗪𝗥𝗜𝗧𝗘𝗥 || 𝗦𝗧𝗥𝗔𝗧𝗘𝗚𝗜𝗦𝗧 ➠ B-DEV @Expand_reach || @GrindersCore Data Analyst, Trader, LLM.









Are you a Dev looking for how to build something powerful then @odosprotocol APIs is here for you. Odos was built for developers who don't want to compromise. Whether you're adding token swaps or pulling live pricing data, the APIs plugs into your product and just work. 1. Smart Order Routing This routing helps users get the best rates on every trade, automatically without extra work on their end. 2. Token Pricing A real-time data that keeps your app sharp and your users informed. 3. Liquidity Zaps Pool deposits and withdrawals in a single click. Meaning that what used to take steps now takes one. 4. Route Visualization This let users see exactly where their trade goes with a clean Sankey diagram. This exactly shows transparency and win more users over. Time to build real impact with Odos APIs. @Ahmet_S_Ozcan








Dey play! X paid me 59million naira in 12months. X is my full time job.


GM In Web3, one of the easiest things to do is publish a roadmap. The hardest thing is actually turning it into a working product step by step. That difference is what I look at when I evaluate projects like @Sumex_Labs. Instead of trying to overwhelm users with too many narratives at once, the development progress has been more focused on gradual, functional improvements that actually change how people use the platform. We’re seeing movement across a few key areas like perpetual trading expansion, subscription based features, improved swap routing through more providers, and deeper blockchain integrations. On their own, these might look like incremental updates. But together, they point toward something more structured: a single environment where trading, swaps, portfolio tracking, and rewards all exist in one place instead of being scattered across multiple tools. One update that stands out is the planned integration of utility tokens into the points and gamification system. This is more than just an incentive layer. In systems like this, gamification often becomes a way to shape user behavior and increase consistent participation. When done properly, it connects usage directly to ecosystem value instead of treating engagement as something separate. What many people call a “super app” in Web3 usually fails because it tries to do everything at once without proper integration. The more practical approach is what Sumex seems to be doing: building each layer carefully, then connecting them into a unified experience over time. In the end, users don’t judge ecosystems by what’s promised. They judge them by how seamlessly everything works together when they actually use it.