Omniston started as a liquidity aggregator inside TON. Then it moved to cross-chain. And now it is turning into an SDK that third-party projects can embed. And this is not just evolution, it is a shift in the architectural role of the protocol.



What is an SDK. It is a set of tools that allows developers to plug Omniston functionality into their application without needing to understand how the protocol works under the hood. RedoTrade has already announced cross-chain integration through the Omniston SDK. Gram Store uses it to process deposits from EVM networks. TractionEye uses it for swaps inside the marketplace.

Why this matters. Before, the protocol was part of STONfi. Now it is becoming an independent layer that can be connected to any project on TON. Like electricity: you do not need to build your own power plant, you just plug into the socket.

For developers this shortens the time from idea to launch. No need to write cross-chain logic from scratch, no need to solve the problem of transaction finality between different networks. All of this is already solved inside Omniston.

For users this means the experience becomes the same regardless of which application they work through. Whether it is RedoTrade, $GRAM Store, or STONfi itself, swaps go by one standard, with one level of speed and one quality of execution.
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