Conclusion

FAQ

FAQ

Q1. What exactly does ETH6900 do?


ETH6900 optimizes Ethereum transactions by queuing and broadcasting them during low-fee windows, reducing gas costs while protecting users from MEV attacks.


Q2. Is ETH6900 a wallet or a dApp?


Neither. It’s a network layer that sits between wallets and the blockchain. Users continue using their existing wallets, while ETH6900 handles optimization invisibly through custom RPC endpoints.


Q3. How does ETH6900 make money?


A small coordination fee (0.05–0.3%) is collected from optimized transactions. This revenue is split between the treasury, stakers, and token buybacks.


Q4. How do users benefit from holding $ETH6900?


Holders can stake tokens for yield, participate in governance votes, and unlock advanced analytics or integration features.


Q5. What ensures the network is secure?


All transactions are non-custodial and signed locally. ETH6900 never holds private keys or user assets. The system is continuously audited and uses private relays for MEV protection.


Q6. Will there be inflation or future token minting?


No. The supply of 69,000,000 $ETH6900 is permanent. The protocol relies on deflationary mechanisms like fee burns and buybacks instead of new emissions.


Q7. Can developers integrate ETH6900 into their dApps?


Yes. The ETH6900 SDK and REST API allow one-line integration into wallets, DeFi platforms, or NFT marketplaces.


Q8. How does governance work?


All decisions — from fee structures to new partnerships — are proposed and voted on by the DAO. Token holders control treasury spending and network upgrades.


Q9. What makes ETH6900 different from other gas tools?


ETH6900 operates as a real-time optimization network, not just a calculator. It uses live gas forecasting, deadline enforcement, and private relays to achieve consistent savings at scale.


Q10. When will cross-chain support launch?


The multi-chain relay framework is planned for 2026, starting with Base, Optimism, and Arbitrum, followed by zkSync and Polygon zkEVM.