
Perps
We are introducing Perpetual Tweet Futures - allowing users to long or short engagement metrics directly. Instead of just buying shares in a tweet, you can take leveraged positions on specific metrics:
Long or short likes
Long or short reposts
Long or short views
Long or short replies
How It Works
Each metric operates as an independent data feed. When you open a long position on “likes,” you’re speculating that the tweet will receive more likes over time relative to its initial snapshot. A short position profits when engagement decelerates.
Users can trade with up to 10x leverage, using PTS as margin.
Liquidations occur when curve movement exceeds your collateral buffer.
Longing
Opening a long means you expect the metric to increase faster than the market currently implies. If the tweet gains momentum, gets reposted by a larger account, or hits the algorithm at the right time, the value of your position increases.
You profit if engagement accelerates.
Shorting
Shorting means you believe the metric will underperform, slow down, or fail to take off.
You’re not betting on “0 engagement” you’re betting the tweet won’t cook as hard as expected.
Shorts profit when:
Engagement slows or flat-lines
Early hype dies out
The tweet fails to reach “viral lift-off”
Growth comes in below the projected trajectory
You profit if engagement decelerates.
Leverage & Margin
Perps support up to 10x leverage. Higher leverage amplifies both gains and losses.
Your PTS is used as margin, and your liquidation threshold depends on:
Your entry price
Your leverage
Live movement of the engagement curve
A volatile tweet, or one boosted by reposts/quote tweets, can rapidly move against your position — especially when shorting.
Liquidations
A position is liquidated when the engagement curve moves past your collateral buffer.
Examples:
Long gets liquidated if engagement drops or slows dramatically
Short gets liquidated if the tweet suddenly pumps, goes viral, or receives a large trading boost.
Liquidation ensures perpetual markets remain solvent and margin-backed.
Last updated