Right at the end of December 2025, something important clicked into place for prediction markets. On December 28, APRO Oracle pushed Oracle as a Service live on BNB Chain, and the timing honestly could not have been better.
BNB Chain has quietly turned into one of the busiest environments for prediction markets. Fees are low, liquidity is deep, and builders are shipping fast. Sports markets, crypto events, and real world outcomes are pulling in users who would not normally touch DeFi. The problem was never demand. The problem was data.
Prediction markets live or die on resolution quality. If data is slow, people lose trust. If feeds can be manipulated, liquidity disappears. And if builders have to run their own oracle infrastructure, most projects never make it past launch. This is exactly the gap APRO is targeting with OaaS.
Instead of forcing teams to operate nodes or stitch together multiple providers, APRO turns its oracle stack into a subscription product. Developers connect through APIs, pay per usage often in AT, and immediately get access to verified data feeds. No infrastructure overhead. No custom oracle logic. Just clean inputs that settle markets the way users expect.
What really matters is what those feeds can handle.
On BNB Chain, APRO is already supplying real time sports data including full NFL coverage, along with pricing feeds, event resolution, and RWA attestations. These are not single source updates. Data is pulled from multiple inputs, processed through large language models, and finalized through independent consensus. If a node submits bad data, it gets slashed. That economic pressure is what keeps the system honest.
This is especially important for AI driven prediction platforms.
More teams are building agents that place conditional bets, adjust probabilities in real time, or automate strategies based on live outcomes. Those systems cannot tolerate lag or ambiguity. APRO’s near real time feeds fit that model. Fresh data arrives quickly, gets verified, and resolves markets without human intervention.
The BNB launch was also part of a broader rollout.
Oracle as a Service went live on Ethereum on December 24, Base on December 26, BNB Chain on December 28, and Solana on December 30. That sequence matters. APRO is positioning itself exactly where prediction markets and autonomous agents are growing fastest.
Usage data shows this is not theoretical.
By the end of December, APRO was processing more than two million AI oracle calls and validations each week. Those calls are actively settling bets, triggering logic, and feeding automated systems. Across more than forty blockchains and over fourteen hundred feeds, this is production infrastructure, not testing.
BNB Chain feels the impact more clearly than most.
With verifiable feeds available out of the box, builders can launch markets faster and with fewer disputes. Liquidity providers see cleaner settlements and stick around longer. Users stop worrying about whether an outcome will be challenged. That kind of confidence compounds quickly.
Another piece that often gets overlooked is storage and auditability.
APRO integrates with decentralized storage like BNB Greenfield, which means data attestations and proofs are immutable and reviewable later. For prediction markets touching regulated topics or large capital flows, that transparency matters.
The institutional backing behind APRO adds weight to this rollout.
Support from Polychain Capital, Franklin Templeton, and YZi Labs, combined with the recently closed fifteen million dollar cumulative funding milestone, signals that this approach is being taken seriously. These are not funds chasing short term hype. They back infrastructure that can survive scale.
Community response going into 2026 reflects that confidence. Developers are actively onboarding to OaaS. Prediction market teams are expanding into new categories like esports and macro events. AT staking participation continues to rise as network usage grows.
What stands out most is how practical this all feels.
APRO is not trying to convince people prediction markets are coming. They already are. The goal is to make them work reliably at scale. Productizing oracles through OaaS is how that happens.
For builders on BNB Chain, this launch removes the hardest dependency in the stack. For users, it means faster and fairer resolutions. And for AT holders, it is utility showing up in real usage.
As 2026 begins, prediction markets are shifting from experiments to infrastructure. APRO’s OaaS launch on BNB Chain looks like one of the quiet moves that made that transition possible.
@APRO_Oracle
#APRO
$AT


