Frequently asked

The questions worth asking.

Straight answers to the things every trader wants to know before they sync their first wallet.

Two sources: on-chain wallet activity (we read your transaction history directly from the chain) and read-only exchange APIs (Hyperliquid, Coinbase, Binance, Bybit, OKX, Polymarket and others).

Both feeds are pulled by us — never typed in by the user. There's no "report your trade" form, no manual entry, no screenshot upload. Which means there's no way to fabricate a position that didn't happen.

You can. Free tier sync your wallets, get a verified record, place on the global leaderboard, and enter any public competition. No card required, no holdings required, no trial expiry.

Entry fees for public comps still apply — you'll need a small amount of CTR to enter the ones with pots, which you can buy on supported DEXes. There are also free-to-enter comps run regularly that don't require CTR at all.

Nothing upfront. The cost is holding CTR. Premium tier (host public competitions) requires holding 1,000 CTR. Elite tier (host private password-gated competitions) requires holding 10,000 CTR. While you hold, you host. Sell the tokens, lose the tier.

Every competition has the same fixed payout split: 60% to 1st, 20% to 2nd, 10% to 3rd, 10% to the community rewards pool. Hosts earn through a rev-share on the pots they run.

Yes. As the host of a private competition, you see every entrant's verified track record before the comp goes live, so you can audit the field your audience is paying into.

Entrants in a private competition see each other only as competitors on the leaderboard once the comp starts. The general public sees nothing — private comps don't appear in the discovery feed.

The same architecture that protects funds protects competition integrity. Trade data isn't editable by anyone — not by us, not by the host, not by the entrant. Performance comes from the chain and the exchange APIs, full stop.

Hosting requires holding CTR (Premium or Elite), which creates a real cost to spinning up fake comps. Every host's own track record is publicly verifiable too, so audiences can audit before they pay in.

Your choice. Disconnecting an exchange API stops new data being pulled but leaves your existing record intact. Removing an integration entirely wipes that source from your profile. Deleting your account wipes everything we hold on you.

If you only want to pause visibility on your record while keeping the data, profile privacy settings let you do that without losing history. You can also revoke API keys directly from your exchange's own dashboard at any time.

Three ways:

  • 01 Earn it — competition wins, community rewards pool distributions, and early-adopter incentives all pay out in CTR.
  • 02 Buy it — CTR is available on supported DEXes. We'll always link to the canonical contract address on the token page.
  • 03 Get airdropped — early platform users and waitlist members receive CTR allocations as part of the launch program.

Most disputes don't happen because the data is auditable end-to-end. Every entry, every trade, every position is independently verifiable on-chain or against the exchange's own API.

If something needs review — exchange downtime affecting price data, an API outage during settlement, an integration edge case — settlement is paused and the team works through it openly. We'll always show the working, never the result without it.

The product is globally accessible. Some competitions involving CTR buy-ins may be restricted in specific jurisdictions depending on local regulation around crypto-prize contests.

Free-to-enter competitions and the verified record itself work everywhere. We'll always flag any restriction at the competition level before you try to enter — never at the wallet level.

Near-term: deeper integrations across Base, more competition formats (team-vs-team, draft-style, bracket tournaments), and AI-driven feedback on the user's actual synced trades.

Further out: cross-platform reputation portability, formal security audits, and capital routing — pointing your verified record at the deployment opportunities where your edge actually shows up. Read the full litepaper →