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Documentation Index

Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://viva-0e96cde9.mintlify.app/llms.txt

Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.

Two prices you will see

Market price — what the next token roughly costs when you trade, shown on charts. Larger buys usually pay a higher average because supply moves along the curve. Floor price — a minimum redemption reference maintained by the protocol. Under normal operation it is designed not to fall when fees and tax add to floor support and the floor is raised. The product is built so market price stays at or above the floor under normal rules. That is not a promise that charts only go up.

Floor price + launch curve

When a token launches, the protocol sets:
  • A starting floor and a curve shape for supply above the floor.
  • That curve anchor does not move with social hype — only the floor can rise from fee flows.
While people trade:
  • Part of each trade and borrow fee (the non-treasury half) goes to the creator and floor support.
  • Half of sell profit tax also feeds floor support.
When enough has accumulated, the protocol raises the floor without changing the original curve anchor.

Why buys feel “more expensive” over time

After the 1.25% buy fee, your quote is exchanged for newly minted tokens along the curve. More supply ⇒ higher price on the curve — not a flat price per token.

Why the floor matters for spot traders

Sells compute a gross quote from the rules, then subtract trade fee and possibly profit tax. The Trade preview is authoritative. Same-block rule: if you bought from the pool this block, you cannot sell in the same block.

Why the floor matters for borrowers

Borrow capacity uses the floor on locked tokens, not a CEX ticker. If the floor rises after you borrow, the app may let you unlock some collateral without sending quote — read the full simulation before signing.

What the floor is not

  • Not a guarantee of market cap growth.
  • Not protection from meme or scam risk.
  • Not legal or investment advice — see Security.
Fees · Economic model