1. A market is defined
Every market starts as a real asset with a real reference: a specific watch reference number, a shoe with a known resale history, a card with graded comps, a pre-IPO name, or a listed stock. Each one gets its own market with a chart, an order flow, and a holder base. Markets come in two kinds:Spot markets
You buy and hold the asset. Spot markets show a live holder list and trade history, all on-chain.
Perp markets
You go long or short with leverage. Perps are available on assets liquid and well priced enough to support them.
2. The oracle sets a fair value
An asset that trades a few times a year has no book to quote from. OperSa’s oracle builds one. For collectibles, an autonomous valuation agent gathers real market evidence, recent comparable sales and listings, then a deterministic engine cleans that evidence, throws out stale and outlier data, and produces a single defensible value with a confidence score. The agent proposes, the rules decide. For stocks, there is no need to estimate. OperSa reads a live on-chain price feed, so equity markets track the real market price directly.See exactly how pricing works
The full methodology, the honesty labels, and why the number can be trusted.
3. Liquidity makes it tradable
A fair value is not a market on its own. A market needs depth, something to trade against. Every OperSa market is seeded with a liquidity pool that provides that depth, plus a set of market participants holding distributed positions. The result is a book you can actually trade into, with a price that moves as orders hit it.How liquidity is built
Pools, depth, and how the price finds fair value.
4. The price moves with real flow
When you buy, the price ticks up. When you sell, it ticks down. Size moves it more than a small clip does, exactly like a real book. The market drifts around the oracle’s fair value and is continually pulled back toward it, so price discovery stays honest instead of running away on a single large order.5. Everything settles on-chain
Your trade is a transaction on Robinhood Chain. Your position, your profit and loss, the holder list, and the trade history are all on-chain and public. Nothing here is a number in a private database. You can click any holder or trade and open it in the block explorer.The chain and the contracts
Network details, addresses, and how settlement works.
