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pikasui
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pikasui

Pika Pika from Sui eco
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For 365 days straight, he bought 1,000 $SUI every single day.
For 365 days straight, he bought 1,000 $SUI every single day.
水哥Watergorsui
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365 consecutive days—buying 1,000 $SUI every day.
Today, I finally finished it.
A year ago, I made a promise to myself.
Not watching the market or trying to guess the bottom—no matter how the market moves, every day I buy 1,000 $SUI.
From $4, all the way down to $0.7.
365 days—no interruptions for a single day.
So much has happened this past year.
The entire crypto market has been sluggish, and the Sui ecosystem has faced challenge after challenge.
Cetus was hacked, chain halted events... each time it filled the market with doubts and made many people choose to leave.
Honestly, I’ve also doubted myself.
Should we keep going or not?
Article
The Tide on Sui: A Short History of DEX LiquidityEvery new generation of DEX is really answering the same question— how to welcome the good customers, and how to keep the bad ones out. 1. May 3, 2023: Starting from Day One On May 3, 2023, the day the Sui mainnet went live, Cetus was already there. It wasn't just the first DEX on Sui—it was also the first protocol to bring concentrated liquidity (CLMM) to the chain. While most early DEXs were still running the most basic full-range AMM model, Cetus chose a more advanced, and harder, path. To see why that path mattered—and what every later generation of DEXs on Sui has really been wrestling with—let's borrow the simplest picture there is: running a small shop. Think of an on-chain "market maker / liquidity provider (LP)" as a shopkeeper. The shopkeeper puts goods on the shelf, posts a buy price and a sell price, and waits for customers to come and trade—earning the small spread in between. The people who walk in and buy at your posted price are your customers—on-chain, this is called taker flow. Remember one line, because it's the soul of this whole article: whether a shopkeeper makes money depends first on whether anyone walks in. The prettiest shop with no customers is just an empty storefront. The entire history of DEXs on Sui, boiled down, is one generation of "shops" after another figuring out: how to draw in the good customers, and how to keep the bad ones out. But before we get to how the shopkeepers each found their edge, there's an even earlier question to answer: when Sui first launched and everything was empty, why would anyone open the first shop at all? The answer is "opening support." Early on, Sui's foundation rolled out a series of incentive programs—using rewards to invite the first wave of DeFi protocols and their users in the door. From trading venues like Cetus, Bluefin, Momentum and Turbos, to the lending protocols that hold deposited capital, all of them were part of this support. It was like the grand opening of a new shopping district: the operator first spends to recruit tenants, and each shop then uses promotions to pull in its first customers. Once there were shops, goods, and even places to park idle money for interest, the on-chain market truly started to turn. But rewards can't last forever. And that planted the seed for everything that followed: once "earning from rewards" became unsustainable, everyone had to figure out how to do good business on real skill, not subsidies. Almost every evolution you're about to see is, in some way, an answer to that question. 2. The First Shops: From "Stocking Every Price" to "Stocking Only Where It Matters" The earliest AMMs (automated market makers) worked like this: the shopkeeper was required to spread goods evenly across every price from zero to infinity. It sounds thorough, but it's terribly wasteful—the vast majority of the goods sit at prices that will never trade, tying up capital for nothing. The CLMM (concentrated liquidity market maker) that Cetus brought changed this: a shopkeeper can stock goods only in the price range where trading is likely to happen. With the same capital concentrated where deals actually occur, you earn far more in fees. This is "capital efficiency." Here's a detail that becomes important later: on Cetus, every LP position is a separate NFT—an asset you hold yourself. This is what later made it possible for someone to manage your position on your behalf. By 2025, Cetus's CLMM implementation had become the de facto standard for concentrated liquidity on Sui—many later protocols built their own products on top of it. To be treated as the foundation by an entire ecosystem is the highest form of recognition a protocol can earn. 3. Even the Foundation Was Tested—and It Held Since we're talking about "foundations," we can't skip the test of 2025. That year, Cetus suffered a serious attack: a vulnerability in a low-level computation library was exploited. At the time, some voices framed it as one protocol's isolated problem. But as the picture became clear, a deeper truth emerged—this underlying library had already been forked and shared by a large number of CLMM protocols across Sui. It wasn't one team's bug; it was a crack in a foundation that the whole sector stood on. What truly showed character was what happened next. On one hand, Sui's validators coordinated quickly at the network level and voted to freeze the attacker's address, stopping the funds from being moved—something many older, more established chains simply cannot do. On the other hand, precisely because Cetus disclosed and responded immediately, the other protocols using the same library were able to freeze their contracts in time and avoid being hit by the same method. Afterward, that underlying library was thoroughly fixed and formally verified, and it remains in wide use across the Sui ecosystem to this day, without further incident. A single test ended up making the whole sector's foundation more solid. This is what an ecosystem looks like as it matures—and it points to something we'll come back to later: alongside the chase for yield and efficiency, the question of how a user's assets are actually held deserves to be taken more seriously. 4. A Different Way to Run a Shop: the DeepBook Order Book Not everyone likes the "stock your shelves and wait for customers" approach. Some professional players want finer control: I want to place a buy or sell order at one exact price, and not trade until that price is hit. DeepBook was built for exactly this need—it's Sui's native, fully on-chain order book, like a standardized "central trading hall" that any application can plug into and share liquidity from. It hands full control back to professional market makers: you can place orders precisely and cancel them at any time. The trade-off: you have to watch the market and manage your orders yourself. Great for professionals, but a high bar for ordinary people. 5. The Lightning-Fast Shop: propAMMs and the "Bad Customer" Here we have to introduce the other main character in this story—the bad customer. As we said, a shopkeeper earns the spread from ordinary customers. Most customers are "clean": they buy because they actually need to, and then they leave; it has nothing to do with whether the price goes up or down a second later. Trading with them, a shopkeeper makes money over the long run. But one kind of "customer" is different. They have better information than you—they already know this item is about to go up in price, so before you've had a chance to change your price tag, they sweep up your cheap goods and immediately resell them higher. Every trade you make with this person, you lose. This is toxic flow. Why can't a shopkeeper defend against it? Because the shopkeeper is always half a step behind on prices. The real market price has already moved, but your shop still shows the old price tag, and you only react once someone comes in to buy. The well-informed and quick-handed simply hunt for that "time gap" and take advantage of you. The money lost this way, added up over time, has a name: LVR (Loss-Versus-Rebalancing)—in plain words, "the money quick players keep skimming from you because you change your prices too slowly." And so a new species appeared: the propAMM (proprietary market maker, also called a dark AMM). Picture it as a shop that reacts at incredible speed, keeps its price tags hidden, and only quotes a price the moment you ask. At extremely low cost, it refreshes its price tags hundreds of times a second, staying almost perfectly in sync with the outside market; it doesn't lay all its cards on the table, and only gives you a quote the instant you walk up to ask. This way, it nearly eliminates the "half a step behind" weakness, keeps the bad customers out, and serves only the clean ones—so it can offer tighter spreads than anyone. On Sui, this species is now emerging in numbers: Magma, Haedal, bolt and others are all exploring this path. They bring a better trading experience, but they also create a knock-on effect for every ordinary shopkeeper: the cleanest, most desirable customers get taken by these lightning-fast shops.What's left for ordinary LPs in the public pools is a thinner stream of customers, and a higher share of bad ones. This is the real turning point of our story. 6. Cetus's Second Move: DLMM—Adding "Steps" to Market-Making Facing new competition, concentrated liquidity itself kept evolving. Long after CLMM, Cetus added the DLMM (Dynamic Liquidity Market Maker) line. If CLMM is a continuous price dial (like a smooth, stepless gear), then DLMM slices price into discrete "steps" (bins) (like the steps of a staircase). Each step is an independent little price range, and you can decide exactly how much to stock on each one. This "step" structure looks like a mere technical detail, but it happens to open a door for the next generation of products—it makes "automated market-making, step by step" smoother than ever before. 7. A New Need: Ordinary People Want a "Professionally Run Shop" Too After going full circle, the question comes back to ordinary people. propAMMs are powerful, but they use their own money and don't take outside capital—you can't hand your coins to one to earn for you. And running your own shop on a CLMM/DLMM is exhausting: you have to pick the range, move your goods when price runs out of it, watch it constantly, and handle all kinds of surprises. So a new generation of products arrived: "managed market-making" services that automatically run a market-making position for ordinary people. This direction already has plenty of friendly explorers: Haedal's haeVault was an early mover in packaging professional market-making strategies into a pooled vault, letting everyday users join with one click; Lotus Finance, built on top of the DeepBook order book, offers retail users grid strategies and ultra-narrow market-making. Each picked a different foundation and a different strategy, serving different people. The fact that so many peers are working on the same thing is exactly what shows that "letting ordinary people make markets easily" is a real need. And on this growing soil, we wanted to answer that same question in a slightly different way. 8. LeafSheep: Running Your Own Shop, For You First, about the name. The leaf sheep (LeafSheep) is a very special sea slug. It keeps the chloroplasts from the algae it eats inside its own body and performs photosynthesis itself—turning what it eats into a steady, self-sustaining source of energy. We think that's exactly what we want to do for users: hand your idle blue-chip assets to the leaf sheep, and let it, like photosynthesis, keep producing yield for you—continuously and automatically. Concretely, LeafSheep is a managed market-making service running on Cetus DLMM. On your own position, it automatically "buys low and sells high" for you: taking goods at low prices when the price dips, releasing them at high prices when the price climbs, turning every back-and-forth swing into fee and spread income. It makes a few deliberate choices worth spelling out—because they're exactly where LeafSheep differs from its friends: We chose Cetus DLMM, because "steps" are naturally suited to grids. LeafSheep's core is grid market-making—placing buy and sell orders at one price level after another. DLMM's discrete bins are themselves "steps," the same structure as a grid; and the BidAsk shape we use (weighting goods toward the two ends of the range) can be placed onto exact levels on those steps. So we chose DLMM not because it's more advanced, but because its structure and our way of making markets fit each other naturally. That's also why we chose to go deep with one home, Cetus, rather than scatter shops everywhere.We're "per-position," not "pooled into one big shop." Some managed services merge everyone's money into one shared position and run it together; what you get is a share of that big position. LeafSheep is different: your position is always your own single, independent NFT. That means you can personalize your own range and strategy instead of following one shared template; and your gains, costs and P&L are accounted for independently, clearly yours, not mixed in and split with a pool of other people.Your principal stays in your hands. What LeafSheep receives is only the authorization to adjust your position, not your principal—we can help you move and replenish goods, but we cannot touch your money. Here we want to say something honest: market-making itself carries risk. If price runs one-directionally out of the range you set, you'll be temporarily left holding "the side you didn't want" (in market-making this is called impermanent loss); and as long as your liquidity is genuinely working in an on-chain pool, you share the same underlying contract-safety assumptions as everyone else—on this point, per-position or pooled vault, no one is exempt. LeafSheep's difference is never about being "safer," but about your position always being the one you independently hold and can personalize. We'd rather say this plainly than use vague wording to make it sound risk-free. We don't race the lightning-fast shops on speed—we live differently. We know that in an era where propAMMs take the clean customers, relying purely on market-making fees is no longer a dependable business. So LeafSheep takes a low-frequency, relaxed path—instead of competing with the lightning-fast shops on who's quicker, we make markets at a calmer pace; and when price temporarily leaves the range and business is slow, we deposit the idle assets into lending protocols to earn interest, so your money isn't sitting idle while it waits for the market to come back. This is a trade-off that runs exactly opposite to "ultra-narrow, high-frequency market-making." We chose it because it suits ordinary people better—more peace of mind, and more resilience through the ups and downs of the market. Closing: Back to That One Measuring Stick We said at the start that the whole history of DEXs on Sui is one generation of liquidity after another learning how to welcome the good customers and keep the bad ones out. From the full-range AMM, to the concentrated liquidity Cetus brought; from DeepBook's precise order book, to the lightning-fast shops of the propAMM; and then to haeVault, Lotus, and today's LeafSheep—each generation has been about helping people run a shop a little more cleverly, and a little more easily. What LeafSheep represents is one particular answer: we run it for you, but the shop is always yours.It's already live on the Sui mainnet, genuinely working for users, and producing real protocol revenue. If you're holding some idle blue-chip assets and don't want to watch the charts every day—maybe you can let this leaf sheep soak up some sun on your behalf. #Sui #DeFi #Cetus

The Tide on Sui: A Short History of DEX Liquidity

Every new generation of DEX is really answering the same question— how to welcome the good customers, and how to keep the bad ones out.
1. May 3, 2023: Starting from Day One On May 3, 2023, the day the Sui mainnet went live, Cetus was already there.
It wasn't just the first DEX on Sui—it was also the first protocol to bring concentrated liquidity (CLMM) to the chain. While most early DEXs were still running the most basic full-range AMM model, Cetus chose a more advanced, and harder, path.
To see why that path mattered—and what every later generation of DEXs on Sui has really been wrestling with—let's borrow the simplest picture there is: running a small shop.
Think of an on-chain "market maker / liquidity provider (LP)" as a shopkeeper. The shopkeeper puts goods on the shelf, posts a buy price and a sell price, and waits for customers to come and trade—earning the small spread in between. The people who walk in and buy at your posted price are your customers—on-chain, this is called taker flow.
Remember one line, because it's the soul of this whole article: whether a shopkeeper makes money depends first on whether anyone walks in. The prettiest shop with no customers is just an empty storefront.
The entire history of DEXs on Sui, boiled down, is one generation of "shops" after another figuring out: how to draw in the good customers, and how to keep the bad ones out.
But before we get to how the shopkeepers each found their edge, there's an even earlier question to answer: when Sui first launched and everything was empty, why would anyone open the first shop at all?
The answer is "opening support." Early on, Sui's foundation rolled out a series of incentive programs—using rewards to invite the first wave of DeFi protocols and their users in the door. From trading venues like Cetus, Bluefin, Momentum and Turbos, to the lending protocols that hold deposited capital, all of them were part of this support. It was like the grand opening of a new shopping district: the operator first spends to recruit tenants, and each shop then uses promotions to pull in its first customers. Once there were shops, goods, and even places to park idle money for interest, the on-chain market truly started to turn.
But rewards can't last forever. And that planted the seed for everything that followed: once "earning from rewards" became unsustainable, everyone had to figure out how to do good business on real skill, not subsidies. Almost every evolution you're about to see is, in some way, an answer to that question.
2. The First Shops: From "Stocking Every Price" to "Stocking Only Where It Matters"
The earliest AMMs (automated market makers) worked like this: the shopkeeper was required to spread goods evenly across every price from zero to infinity. It sounds thorough, but it's terribly wasteful—the vast majority of the goods sit at prices that will never trade, tying up capital for nothing.
The CLMM (concentrated liquidity market maker) that Cetus brought changed this: a shopkeeper can stock goods only in the price range where trading is likely to happen. With the same capital concentrated where deals actually occur, you earn far more in fees. This is "capital efficiency."
Here's a detail that becomes important later: on Cetus, every LP position is a separate NFT—an asset you hold yourself. This is what later made it possible for someone to manage your position on your behalf.
By 2025, Cetus's CLMM implementation had become the de facto standard for concentrated liquidity on Sui—many later protocols built their own products on top of it. To be treated as the foundation by an entire ecosystem is the highest form of recognition a protocol can earn.
3. Even the Foundation Was Tested—and It Held
Since we're talking about "foundations," we can't skip the test of 2025.
That year, Cetus suffered a serious attack: a vulnerability in a low-level computation library was exploited. At the time, some voices framed it as one protocol's isolated problem. But as the picture became clear, a deeper truth emerged—this underlying library had already been forked and shared by a large number of CLMM protocols across Sui. It wasn't one team's bug; it was a crack in a foundation that the whole sector stood on.
What truly showed character was what happened next.
On one hand, Sui's validators coordinated quickly at the network level and voted to freeze the attacker's address, stopping the funds from being moved—something many older, more established chains simply cannot do. On the other hand, precisely because Cetus disclosed and responded immediately, the other protocols using the same library were able to freeze their contracts in time and avoid being hit by the same method.
Afterward, that underlying library was thoroughly fixed and formally verified, and it remains in wide use across the Sui ecosystem to this day, without further incident.
A single test ended up making the whole sector's foundation more solid. This is what an ecosystem looks like as it matures—and it points to something we'll come back to later: alongside the chase for yield and efficiency, the question of how a user's assets are actually held deserves to be taken more seriously.
4. A Different Way to Run a Shop: the DeepBook Order Book
Not everyone likes the "stock your shelves and wait for customers" approach. Some professional players want finer control: I want to place a buy or sell order at one exact price, and not trade until that price is hit.
DeepBook was built for exactly this need—it's Sui's native, fully on-chain order book, like a standardized "central trading hall" that any application can plug into and share liquidity from. It hands full control back to professional market makers: you can place orders precisely and cancel them at any time.
The trade-off: you have to watch the market and manage your orders yourself. Great for professionals, but a high bar for ordinary people.
5. The Lightning-Fast Shop: propAMMs and the "Bad Customer"
Here we have to introduce the other main character in this story—the bad customer.
As we said, a shopkeeper earns the spread from ordinary customers. Most customers are "clean": they buy because they actually need to, and then they leave; it has nothing to do with whether the price goes up or down a second later. Trading with them, a shopkeeper makes money over the long run.
But one kind of "customer" is different. They have better information than you—they already know this item is about to go up in price, so before you've had a chance to change your price tag, they sweep up your cheap goods and immediately resell them higher. Every trade you make with this person, you lose. This is toxic flow.
Why can't a shopkeeper defend against it? Because the shopkeeper is always half a step behind on prices. The real market price has already moved, but your shop still shows the old price tag, and you only react once someone comes in to buy. The well-informed and quick-handed simply hunt for that "time gap" and take advantage of you. The money lost this way, added up over time, has a name: LVR (Loss-Versus-Rebalancing)—in plain words, "the money quick players keep skimming from you because you change your prices too slowly."
And so a new species appeared: the propAMM (proprietary market maker, also called a dark AMM).
Picture it as a shop that reacts at incredible speed, keeps its price tags hidden, and only quotes a price the moment you ask. At extremely low cost, it refreshes its price tags hundreds of times a second, staying almost perfectly in sync with the outside market; it doesn't lay all its cards on the table, and only gives you a quote the instant you walk up to ask. This way, it nearly eliminates the "half a step behind" weakness, keeps the bad customers out, and serves only the clean ones—so it can offer tighter spreads than anyone.
On Sui, this species is now emerging in numbers: Magma, Haedal, bolt and others are all exploring this path.
They bring a better trading experience, but they also create a knock-on effect for every ordinary shopkeeper: the cleanest, most desirable customers get taken by these lightning-fast shops.What's left for ordinary LPs in the public pools is a thinner stream of customers, and a higher share of bad ones.
This is the real turning point of our story.
6. Cetus's Second Move: DLMM—Adding "Steps" to Market-Making
Facing new competition, concentrated liquidity itself kept evolving. Long after CLMM, Cetus added the DLMM (Dynamic Liquidity Market Maker) line.
If CLMM is a continuous price dial (like a smooth, stepless gear), then DLMM slices price into discrete "steps" (bins) (like the steps of a staircase). Each step is an independent little price range, and you can decide exactly how much to stock on each one.
This "step" structure looks like a mere technical detail, but it happens to open a door for the next generation of products—it makes "automated market-making, step by step" smoother than ever before.
7. A New Need: Ordinary People Want a "Professionally Run Shop" Too
After going full circle, the question comes back to ordinary people.
propAMMs are powerful, but they use their own money and don't take outside capital—you can't hand your coins to one to earn for you. And running your own shop on a CLMM/DLMM is exhausting: you have to pick the range, move your goods when price runs out of it, watch it constantly, and handle all kinds of surprises.
So a new generation of products arrived: "managed market-making" services that automatically run a market-making position for ordinary people.
This direction already has plenty of friendly explorers: Haedal's haeVault was an early mover in packaging professional market-making strategies into a pooled vault, letting everyday users join with one click; Lotus Finance, built on top of the DeepBook order book, offers retail users grid strategies and ultra-narrow market-making. Each picked a different foundation and a different strategy, serving different people.
The fact that so many peers are working on the same thing is exactly what shows that "letting ordinary people make markets easily" is a real need.
And on this growing soil, we wanted to answer that same question in a slightly different way.
8. LeafSheep: Running Your Own Shop, For You
First, about the name.
The leaf sheep (LeafSheep) is a very special sea slug. It keeps the chloroplasts from the algae it eats inside its own body and performs photosynthesis itself—turning what it eats into a steady, self-sustaining source of energy.
We think that's exactly what we want to do for users: hand your idle blue-chip assets to the leaf sheep, and let it, like photosynthesis, keep producing yield for you—continuously and automatically.
Concretely, LeafSheep is a managed market-making service running on Cetus DLMM. On your own position, it automatically "buys low and sells high" for you: taking goods at low prices when the price dips, releasing them at high prices when the price climbs, turning every back-and-forth swing into fee and spread income.
It makes a few deliberate choices worth spelling out—because they're exactly where LeafSheep differs from its friends:
We chose Cetus DLMM, because "steps" are naturally suited to grids. LeafSheep's core is grid market-making—placing buy and sell orders at one price level after another. DLMM's discrete bins are themselves "steps," the same structure as a grid; and the BidAsk shape we use (weighting goods toward the two ends of the range) can be placed onto exact levels on those steps. So we chose DLMM not because it's more advanced, but because its structure and our way of making markets fit each other naturally. That's also why we chose to go deep with one home, Cetus, rather than scatter shops everywhere.We're "per-position," not "pooled into one big shop." Some managed services merge everyone's money into one shared position and run it together; what you get is a share of that big position. LeafSheep is different: your position is always your own single, independent NFT. That means you can personalize your own range and strategy instead of following one shared template; and your gains, costs and P&L are accounted for independently, clearly yours, not mixed in and split with a pool of other people.Your principal stays in your hands. What LeafSheep receives is only the authorization to adjust your position, not your principal—we can help you move and replenish goods, but we cannot touch your money.
Here we want to say something honest: market-making itself carries risk. If price runs one-directionally out of the range you set, you'll be temporarily left holding "the side you didn't want" (in market-making this is called impermanent loss); and as long as your liquidity is genuinely working in an on-chain pool, you share the same underlying contract-safety assumptions as everyone else—on this point, per-position or pooled vault, no one is exempt. LeafSheep's difference is never about being "safer," but about your position always being the one you independently hold and can personalize. We'd rather say this plainly than use vague wording to make it sound risk-free.
We don't race the lightning-fast shops on speed—we live differently. We know that in an era where propAMMs take the clean customers, relying purely on market-making fees is no longer a dependable business. So LeafSheep takes a low-frequency, relaxed path—instead of competing with the lightning-fast shops on who's quicker, we make markets at a calmer pace; and when price temporarily leaves the range and business is slow, we deposit the idle assets into lending protocols to earn interest, so your money isn't sitting idle while it waits for the market to come back.
This is a trade-off that runs exactly opposite to "ultra-narrow, high-frequency market-making." We chose it because it suits ordinary people better—more peace of mind, and more resilience through the ups and downs of the market.
Closing: Back to That One Measuring Stick
We said at the start that the whole history of DEXs on Sui is one generation of liquidity after another learning how to welcome the good customers and keep the bad ones out.
From the full-range AMM, to the concentrated liquidity Cetus brought; from DeepBook's precise order book, to the lightning-fast shops of the propAMM; and then to haeVault, Lotus, and today's LeafSheep—each generation has been about helping people run a shop a little more cleverly, and a little more easily.
What LeafSheep represents is one particular answer: we run it for you, but the shop is always yours.It's already live on the Sui mainnet, genuinely working for users, and producing real protocol revenue.
If you're holding some idle blue-chip assets and don't want to watch the charts every day—maybe you can let this leaf sheep soak up some sun on your behalf.
#Sui #DeFi #Cetus
The people who make money in crypto usually aren't the smartest — they're the ones who spotted the right project early. On Sui right now, that project is Cetus. It just launched Cetus Skills: AI agents (bots that trade on-chain by themselves) can now plug straight into Cetus, the deepest liquidity on Sui, to swap and trade on their own — and anyone can build their own agent on top of it. In one move, Cetus put itself at the center of the two hottest things going: Sui and AI. Why care? Cetus is the foundation Sui DeFi runs on, and it just keeps shipping. As more agents and projects build on it, more volume flows through it. And you don't have to just watch — you can swap, provide liquidity, and get a feel for where Sui's heading before most people catch on. While everyone scrolls past headlines, Cetus is quietly building the rails Sui and AI will run on. Getting familiar early is how people set up for what's next. 🌊 Not financial advice — DYOR. #Cetus #Sui #DeFi
The people who make money in crypto usually aren't the smartest — they're the ones who spotted the right project early. On Sui right now, that project is Cetus.
It just launched Cetus Skills: AI agents (bots that trade on-chain by themselves) can now plug straight into Cetus, the deepest liquidity on Sui, to swap and trade on their own — and anyone can build their own agent on top of it. In one move, Cetus put itself at the center of the two hottest things going: Sui and AI.
Why care? Cetus is the foundation Sui DeFi runs on, and it just keeps shipping. As more agents and projects build on it, more volume flows through it. And you don't have to just watch — you can swap, provide liquidity, and get a feel for where Sui's heading before most people catch on.
While everyone scrolls past headlines, Cetus is quietly building the rails Sui and AI will run on. Getting familiar early is how people set up for what's next. 🌊
Not financial advice — DYOR.
#Cetus #Sui #DeFi
stake $xCETUS to earn protocol revenue. $CETUS $SUI
stake $xCETUS to earn protocol revenue.
$CETUS $SUI
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