AFX enters the perp DEX race — a sovereign Layer 1 with on-chain order books, 100ms latency, and zero-gas execution, challenging Hyperliquid's $250.5B monthly volume lead in a sector with $21.9B in daily volume.
AFX enters the perp DEX race — a sovereign Layer 1 with on-chain order books, 100ms latency, and zero-gas execution, challenging Hyperliquid's $250.5B monthly volume lead in a sector with $21.9B in daily volume.

Perpetual futures DEXs recorded $21.9 billion in 24-hour volume on July 3, with $15.5 billion in open interest, as AFX entered the market to challenge Hyperliquid's dominance, DefiLlama data shows.
"Hyperliquid's lead is substantial but not yet protected by regulation, brand loyalty, or deep institutional lock-in," Bradley Peak, an analyst covering DeFi derivatives, said. "The sector is still early enough that a well-designed chain with real on-chain execution can compete for market share."
AFX is a sovereign Layer 1 built specifically for perpetual futures trading, featuring a fully on-chain order book, on-chain matching and settlement, zero-gas execution, and 100-millisecond median latency. The chain also offers MEV-resistant protection and deterministic ordering — features aimed at professional traders who prioritize execution quality over simple leveraged exposure. Hyperliquid, by comparison, generated roughly $250.5 billion in 30-day perp volume, leaving it the clear sector leader but with no structural moat preventing challengers from entering.
The competitive landscape spans multiple architectural approaches. dYdX uses a Cosmos-based appchain with in-memory order books. GMX relies on pooled liquidity and oracle pricing. Drift runs a hybrid AMM-order book model on Solana. Lighter emphasizes ZK-verified matching and liquidations. Aevo operates as an EVM-based optimistic rollup. AFX differentiates through vertical integration — coordinating consensus, order book execution, settlement, margin, liquidation, APIs, and trader UX inside one dedicated system.
AFX also targets automated traders through agent wallets that can place, cancel, and modify orders, update leverage and margin mode, and receive private WebSocket data. Users can limit agent permissions for withdrawals, transfers, and vault operations, creating a permissioned framework for bot-driven and AI-assisted trading strategies.
Risk controls include manipulation-resistant mark pricing based on native order book data and external exchange feeds, staged liquidations, backstop liquidity through a protocol vault, and capped open interest per market. Zellic's public audit repository lists an AFX Bridge audit from May 2026 on EVM, providing third-party verification for the bridge scope.
AFX's tokenomics allocate 73 percent of the 1 billion token supply to community distribution, with 30 percent reserved for protocol incentives, 27 percent for genesis distribution fully unlocked at TGE, and no VC or private round allocation. Core contributors receive 19 percent with a one-year cliff and 36-month linear vesting. The VIP program allocates 30 percent to 50 percent of protocol revenue across eligible trading tiers.
The open question is whether AFX can prove its design under stress. Liquidity depth, uptime during volatile markets, liquidation behavior, and trader retention will determine whether it captures meaningful share from Hyperliquid, dYdX, or GMX — or remains a technically interesting alternative with thin order books.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.