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In DeFi, early on doesn’t just mean chasing high APY—it also means having the power to define the rules.
MarbMarket is about to launch on MegaETH, and it is also the first veDEX in this ecosystem—just that alone is worth paying attention to.
To make the core clear first: MarbMarket is a veDEX, meaning a vote escrow decentralized exchange. Users obtain veToken by locking tokens, and accumulate governance power over time.
What’s more, this time MarbMarket is launched fairly—there is no presale and no venture capital backing.
(No presale means no insiders can get tokens at a discount before the launch.)
(No VC backing means there are no institutional allocations, so there is no structural sell pressure. From day one, all tokens are distributed to the community through a fair-launch mechanism.)
In the traditional VC model, early allocations are already concentrated, and ordinary users often enter only after the distribution is completed—but here, that path is completely reset.
As an early participant, what you gain isn’t just tokens, but influence over how the value of the entire system is allocated.
Under the ve(3,3) model: you lock MARB and get veMARB.
When you hold veMARB, you decide where the liquidity incentives flow.
When the project team needs liquidity, they don’t passively receive it—they must actively compete.
They win over your votes by providing additional incentives, meaning bribes.
This changes the core logic: your voting power is not only a governance tool, but an asset that can be priced.
That’s also why MarbMarket is not just a DEX, but a market for distribution rights.
Next, take a look at this structural flywheel: the more you lock, the stronger your governance power; the stronger your governance, the greater your control over emissions; the greater your control, the higher the external demand; and when demand increases, it in turn reinforces the value of voting power.
This loop allows early participants to shape the entire structure.
At the moment, MegaETH doesn’t yet have a dominant-tier DEX. If this model works, what MarbMarket is fighting for won’t be just trading volume, but control over liquidity distribution.
Overall, you’re not just entering a trading platform—you’re entering a market where distribution rights are traded.
To learn more:
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When liquidity competition truly begins, what determines your position will no longer just be the size of your capital, but who holds the voting power.