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Many people haven't realized that the core of this round of competition has changed.
It's not about who is faster, nor about who is cheaper, but about who controls the incentive distribution.
And this is exactly the problem veDEX aims to solve.
Let's clarify the definition first:
veDEX is essentially a vote-escrow (voting escrow) model DEX, where you lock tokens to obtain veTokens, trading "time" for "governance rights."
The longer you lock, the greater your power.
These powers are not just for show; they directly determine one thing: who receives liquidity incentives.
Taking @Marb_market, which will launch on MegaETH, as an example, this is a project that explicitly adopts veDEX design and focuses on fair launch.
No pre-sales, no VCs, everyone starts from the same point, participating in distribution through token locking.
The mechanism is simple:
Lock MARB → Obtain veTokens
Use veTokens → Vote to decide which pool receives incentives
If the project wants liquidity → It must compete for your vote
At this point, a key point emerges:
Bribes are not gray-area behavior but part of the mechanism.
Projects can offer additional rewards to voters in exchange for their voting power.
In other words: your governance rights are inherently a tradable asset.
The entire system begins to turn into a market:
LPs earn returns through LP farming (liquidity mining);
Lockers generate cash flow through voting + bribes;
Protocols compete to maintain continuous liquidity.
This is completely different from traditional DEXs:
In the past, the logic was subsidizing to attract liquidity, which was essentially consumption.
Now, the logic is game-theoretic competition for liquidity, which is an endogenous cycle.
Looking at the structural flywheel:
More lockups → stronger governance rights
Stronger governance rights → increased bribes
Increased bribes → higher returns
Higher returns → attract more lockups
Once this cycle is established, later participants find it hard to shake, and currently, MegaETH has not seen a dominant DEX, giving @Marb_market a window of opportunity.
And veDEX's history has already proven one thing: the protocol that first successfully runs this model often locks in the most core liquidity.
If you still view these projects through the lens of traditional AMMs, you may underestimate their structural value.
veDEX is not about optimizing trading but about reconstructing distribution — this is a crucial shift.
More information can be found by yourself:
When liquidity begins to compete, the deciding factor is no longer price but voting power.
You either participate before the structure forms or passively accept the outcome after it forms.