Pillar 3

How to use it

Read this as a sequence. Focus mode turns each step into one screen.

Before you start

official LPX terms; official glossary and hard questions; official uP risks

You need a wallet that supports PulseChain and a small amount of PLS for gas.

You are responsible for your own keys, devices, and approvals. Nobody legitimate will ask you to send tokens to a person.

Use test amounts first. The official site says to consult qualified professionals and use test wallets before making transactions.

You need a PulseChain wallet and some PLS for gas.

Keep your keys private. Use a small test amount first.

Read the pool list

PlusX app screenshots

The pool list shows the Fund and Anchor pair, the Fund amount, the Anchor amount, and the 30-day APR.

A pool card shows APR since inception, No Trade Zone, profit split, reinvested amount, manager reward, fee, and the four price lines.

The app lists pools.

Each pool has a token pair, token amounts, APR, band settings, and fees.

Read the chart

PlusX app screenshots; official LPX overview

The chart draws the band lines over the live price. This lets you see the no-trade zone.

The four price lines are Max Sell, Sell, Buy, and Min Buy.

The chart shows price and the band.

Look for the sell line and the buy line.

No-Trade Zone band diagram A price line with a shaded hold zone. The bottom edge is labelled buy edge. The top edge is labelled sell edge. sell edge: pool sells Fund buy edge: pool buys Fund hold inside the band
The shaded No-Trade Zone is the hold area. The pool trades only at the labelled band edges.

Join an existing pool

official manager playbook; official LPX overview

Browse pools, read the pool card, connect your wallet, and deposit.

Joining a pool means accepting that pool's settings. You are a depositor, not the manager.

You can withdraw at any time. There are no lock-ups and no deposit or withdrawal fees.

Pick a pool only after you read its card.

If you join, you accept its settings. You can leave later.

Joining compared with creating

official manager playbook; official LPX overview

The choice is about control. Joining uses another pool's settings. Creating your own pool gives you the settings.

Joining a pool vs creating your own
Joining an existing poolCreating your own pool
Control: you are a depositor, not the manager.Control: you choose the pool settings.
Settings: you accept the pool's NTZ, fee, reward, and range.Settings: you choose Fund, Anchor, starting ratio, LPX type, mode, NTZ, and range.
Who it suits: a beginner path using an existing Managed or Immutable pool with a small test amount.Who it suits: the Solo path for someone ready to choose and manage settings.

Joining is simpler. Creating gives you control.

Both choices still carry risk.

Create your own pool

official LPX overview; official manager playbook; official No-Trade Zone guide

You choose the Fund token, Anchor token, starting ratio, LPX type, mode, NTZ, and price range.

A narrower NTZ trades often and can sell a runner early. A wider NTZ trades rarely and captures less chop.

If a token never had an LPX before, opening access requires depositing and burning some uP and uPX.

Creating a pool gives you the settings.

The band can be narrow or wide. Each choice has a trade-off.

Watch and exit

official manager playbook; official No-Trade Zone guide; official contract guide; official LPX overview

Check the pool's ratio and accrued yield, not the minute-to-minute dollar tape.

Trades happen at band edges and on keeper cycles, not on every tick.

When you withdraw, you receive the pool's current token mix plus accrued yield.

Watch the token mix and yield.

Trades happen at the band edges. When you leave, you get your share of the current mix.