Brothers, when you see those old oracles still using outdated methods, you should know that APRO Oracle is simply a revolutionary existence.
How do others quote prices? Make a few calls, use whoever answers, and finally take an average. It's common to be a few seconds slow.
APRO directly obtains data from market makers and quantitative teams co-located with Binance and Bybit, where the quoted prices, if wrong, can lead to real losses of millions of dollars.
Last time during the classic spike in BTC, it went from 72,000 to 58,000 in 11 minutes. The K-line shown by other oracles was as absurd as in 2021, but APRO's median price consistently tracked the real heartbeat of the exchanges. That’s not luck; it's fundamentally different design.
APRO is very clear: only those players who bleed real money with a single mistake can achieve sub-second precision. Therefore, it brings all these players to become nodes, rewarding them with real money using AT tokens. Even more brutally - if anyone's quote deviates from the strictly set error band, the collateral is directly burned.
This entire incentive loop is extremely sharp: the more accurate your internal price, the easier it is to become the anchor for final pricing, and the more AT you earn; if you dare to be lazy or quote incorrectly, you are immediately punished without mercy. Over time, the entire price source automatically becomes the sharpest knife of the day, more decisive than any committee vote.
Slowly, APRO is no longer just a price oracle.
Order book depth, signature data, funding rates (with errors of less than 1 basis point), volatility surfaces... all of them are fed in.
In the past, trading platforms had to leave a 0.5% buffer for safety against liquidations; now they can almost run naked because the price feeds are sharp enough.
The result is lower slippage, tighter spreads, fewer liquidations, and visible profits.
The tokenomics are also straightforward:
Fixed total supply, no pre-mining, real money burned every quarter.
Revenue comes from protocol usage fees, exchange access, and purchasing low-latency versions, with most of the collected AT permanently burned.
The market is clean, the main players are firmly in place, and occasionally there are new platforms coming in (usually Asian perpetual contracts or European lending protocols); thousands of BTC buy orders come in and the price doesn’t budge.
Its market capitalization is now in a delicate position:
Timeline players find it expensive, while those who truly understand find it too cheap.
With a valuation of less than 1 billion USD, protecting hundreds of billions in exposure. This kind of mismatch usually only lasts until the day it suddenly ends.
The next version is already in testing:
Cross-chain messages and price feeds are signed with the same frequency, updating 30 times per second.
Once the mainnet is online, half of the arbitrage space between Ethereum and Solana will be directly erased, with price differences tending towards zero, and AT will burn even more fiercely, deepening the moat further.
This thing usually doesn't make noise; when you really need it, it's often too late to think about switching.
Everyone has long said that the oracle war is over; in fact, the winner is just too lazy to celebrate.
On weekends, you can check the delay charts during low trading volumes. If that line stays below 280 milliseconds for several consecutive days, a major market movement is often just around the corner.


