Cross-chain discussions often focus on smart contracts and cryptography, but one of Omniston’s most important ideas is much simpler: competition. The protocol introduces independent participants called resolvers. A resolver is essentially a professional liquidity provider that commits its own capital to fulfill swap requests. Instead of users waiting for a central pool to process transactions, multiple resolvers can compete to offer the best execution. That creates several advantages. Pricing becomes competitive because resolvers want to win orders. Liquidity becomes flexible because participants bring their own inventory instead of depending on one protocol-owned reserve. And risk becomes distributed because no single party controls a massive vault of user assets. What’s equally important is what resolvers cannot do. They don’t receive control over user funds. They can’t simply promise to execute and disappear. Once committed, they must lock their own destination-side assets into the swap structure. If the transaction completes, they receive the source asset. If it doesn’t, both sides are refunded according to the protocol rules. That alignment of incentives matters. Resolvers only benefit by successfully completing the transaction they agreed to fulfill. For users, the experience feels like requesting a quote and accepting the best offer. Underneath, it’s a competitive liquidity market working to make cross-chain execution more efficient. see more details on the STON.fi blog: https://blog.ston.fi/omniston-explained-how-cross-chain-swaps-on-ton-work-without-a-bridge/ #BTC Price Analysis# #Macro Insights# #Altcoin Season# $COAI $BRETT