The liquidity pool supports payouts for winning predictions and receives value flow from losing outcomes according to platform rules.
LP participants can monitor pool share, value changes, and contribution metrics while keeping exposure aligned with their risk tolerance.
What is the role of liquidity providers in Rush Sports?
Liquidity providers supply pool capital used to support prediction payouts, enabling continuous live gameplay across markets.
Can LPs withdraw at any time?
Withdrawal behavior depends on current program and pool conditions, but LP views are designed to show current position and value clearly.
How should LPs think about risk?
LP performance depends on aggregate prediction outcomes, payout exposure controls, and long-term participation discipline.
How is LP performance tracked?
LP values and ranking metrics are surfaced in liquidity and leaderboard views, with updates tied to settlement and pool accounting.
Is LP activity visible to users?
Yes. LP-related metrics are exposed through app interfaces to improve transparency around pool participation.
Is Rush Sports custodial?
No. Rush Sports is designed as a non-custodial product. Session flows are used for speed, but settlement and balances are handled through on-chain program logic.
What happens during stale-data periods?
If live price data is stale or unavailable, prediction placement can be restricted and affected rounds can be canceled according to settlement safeguards.
Can I use demo mode before betting real SOL?
Yes. Demo mode is intended for practice and does not require wallet funding, while live mode requires a funded session for real predictions.
Where can I verify game outcomes and settlements?
Outcomes and settlements are processed with on-chain records, and supporting interfaces are available in app views such as match history and leaderboard context.