The Good Tech Companies - How Orbs Is Turning Base Network DEXs Into Perpetual Futures Powerhouses
Episode Date: November 12, 2025This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/how-orbs-is-turning-base-network-dexs-into-perpetual-futures-powerhouses. TrebleSwap integra...tes Orbs Perpetual Hub Ultra for instant perpetual futures on Base. Plug-and-play infrastructure routes CEX and DEX liquidity. Check more stories related to web3 at: https://hackernoon.com/c/web3. You can also check exclusive content about #web3, #blockchain, #orbs, #trebleswap, #good-company, #defi, #dex, #cryptocurrency, and more. This story was written by: @ishanpandey. Learn more about this writer by checking @ishanpandey's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. TrebleSwap integrates Orbs Perpetual Hub Ultra for instant perpetual futures on Base. Plug-and-play infrastructure routes CEX and DEX liquidity.
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How Orbs is turning base network D-E-Xs into perpetual futures powerhouses?
By a Sean Pondy, greater than can decentralized exchanges finally compete with centralized platforms
in greater than derivatives trading without building their own infrastructure from scratch?
Treble Swap thinks so.
The base network decks has integrated perpetual hub ultra, ALAY-E-R-3 technology from Orbs
that transforms exchanges into perpetual futures trading venues through plug and play infrastructure.
The integration, announced November 11, 2025, represents a shift in how smaller DEX's access
institutional grade trading capabilities without the engineering burden typically required.
What perpetual Hub Ultra actually does? Perpetual Hub Ultra functions as pre-built derivatives
infrastructure. DeX's plug into the system and immediately gain access to hedging mechanisms,
liquidation engines, oracle feeds, and trading interfaces without coding these components
themselves. The technology routes liquidity from multiple sources simultaneously. Traders execute
orders that pull from on-chain liquidity pools and off-chain sources, including Binance,
creating deeper order books than most DEXs achieve alone. This address is a problem that has
plagued decentralized derivatives for years, insufficient liquidity leading to slippage and
poor execution prices. Orbs developed perpetual Hub Ultra in collaboration with SIM, I.O, building on
with the company calls layer three infrastructure. Unlike layer two solutions that primarily handle
scaling, layer three in Orb's framework handles specific application logic. The system executes
complex trading operations that standard smart contracts cannot manage efficiently, including real-time
risk calculations and cross-exchange hedging. Treble Swaps base network bet. Treble swap operates
on base, the Ethereum Layer 2 network launched by Coinbase in August 2023. The platform
combines token swaps, concentrated liquidity pools, cross-chain bridges, and a token launchpad
within a single interface. Base network has attracted Dex builders because of low transaction
costs and direct connection to Coinbase's ecosystem. However, derivatives trading has remained
underdeveloped on base compared to networks like Arbitrum or Optimism, where GMX and other
perpetuals protocols have established dominant positions. Treble Swaps integration positions the platform
to capture derivatives trading volume on base without the multi-month development cycle competitors
faced. The platform plans to add limit orders, fiat on ramps, and what it describes AS institutional
grade hooks in upcoming releases. The intent-based trading model. Intent-based trading has gained
traction in Defi over the past 18 months. Rather than users manually routing trades across multiple
liquidity sources, intent-based systems accept an order and automatically find optimal execution
paths. Protocols like Uniswap X and Kowswap have demonstrated this model in spot trading.
Perpetual Hub Ultra extends the concept to derivatives. A trader submits an intent to open a 10x
leveraged position on ETH. The system routes that order across available liquidity, hedges the
position through connected exchanges, and manages ongoing risk without user intervention. This contrasts
with traditional decks derivatives where traders interact directly with automated market makers or
order books, manually managing their own hedging strategies. The difference matters for capital
efficiency. Intent-based systems can aggregate fragmented liquidity that would otherwise sit idle
across multiplevenues. Infrastructure as product strategy, Orbs has deployed variations
of perpetual hub across multiple protocols before the ultra version. The company positions itself
as infrastructure rather than competing directly with DEXs for trading volume. This mirrors strategies
used by protocols like gelato network, which provides automation infrastructure, or the graph, which
handles data indexing. Rather than building a consumer-facing exchange, these protocols sell picks and
shovels to those who do. Orbs operates through a proof of state consensus with validators distributed
globally. The network processes trading logic separately from the underlying blockchain where trades settle.
This architecture allows Orbs to update trading features without requiring changes to
base layer protocols like Ethereum or base. The company has previously launched DLIMIT for limit orders,
DTWAP for time-weighted average price execution, and liquidity hub for aggregating Dex and
C-E-X liquidity. Each functions as a modular component that protocols can integrate
independently or in combination. What this means for Dex competition, centralized exchanges
dominate derivatives trading. Binance, OKX, and bi-be collectively process over $100 billion in daily
perpetual futures volume. Decentralized perpetuals handle roughly $3.5 billion daily across all
protocols combined. The gap exists partly because building derivatives infrastructure requires
specialized engineering. Liquidation engines must operate reliably during high volatility.
Oracle systems need manipulation resistance. Risk management demands real time
calculation across thousands of positions. Most Dex teams lack resources to build these systems
while also developing user interfaces, conducting security audits, managing liquidity, and
handling regulatory considerations. Off-the-shelf infrastructure changes the calculation. A team can
launch a derivatives platform in weeks rather than quarters. However, this creates new dependencies.
DEX's using perpetual Hub Ultra rely on ORB's validators to process trading logic correctly.
If Orbs experiences downtime or technical issues, all integrated platforms suffer.
This centralizes risk differently than monolithic exchanges but does not eliminate it.
Market implications and risk factors.
The integration highlights a broader trend toward modular defy infrastructure, rather than vertically integrated protocols controlling every component of their stack.
Newer platforms assemble capabilities from specialized providers.
Thiscald accelerate decks development but may also lead to homogenization.
If multiple platforms use identical infrastructure, differentiation becomes difficult.
Treble swap competes with other base D-EXs on factors like user experience, token offerings,
and marketing rather than fundamental trading technology. Capital efficiency improvements
through better liquidity routing could reduce the edge centralized exchanges maintain.
However, regulatory clarity remains clearer for offshore centralized platforms than for fully
decentralized alternatives. Most jurisdictions have not established.
clear frameworks for defy derivatives, creating ongoing legal uncertainty.
The integration between treble swap and orbs demonstrates that technical barriers to launching
competitive derivatives platforms are falling. Whether that translates to meaningful volume capture from
centralized exchanges depends on factors beyond technology, including regulatory developments,
institutional adoption patterns, and whether users prioritize decentralization over the
familiarity of established platforms. Final thoughts, the partnership between orbs and
treble swap represents infrastructure maturation rather than innovation in trading mechanisms.
Perpetual futures have existed in Defi since 2020, but deployment complexity restricted them to
well-funded protocols. Democritizing access to these capabilities could fragment the marketer
allow niche DEXs to compete in specific verticals. The risk lies in dependency, protocols adopting
turnkey infrastructure sacrifice control over core functionality. If Orbs changes fee structures,
alters performance characteristics or experiences security incidents, integrated DEX shave limited
recourse. This differs from traditional infrastructure choices. ADEX switching from one RPC
provider to another is straightforward, but replacing an entire derivative stack post-launch
requires rebuilding the product. Base network selection is pragmatic, the ecosystem needs
derivatives options, and first-movers gain advantage. However, Coinbase's control over
Bacy introduces centralization that contradicts Defy principles some users prioritize.
Treble Swap is betting that Bacy's user base cares more about low fees in Coinbase integration
than about maximizing decentralization. The intent-based trading model works well when
liquidity exists to fulfill intents. In low volume conditions or during market stress,
the system's advantages diminish. How perpetual Hub Ultra performs during a flash crash
or exchange outage will determine whether it genuinely competes with centralized alternative.
or simply works adequately during normal conditions. Don't forget to like and share the story.
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