Infrastructure, not a memecoin
OmniCoin is the fuel and utility token of a live blockchain — the network does not run without it. The chain launched before any fundraising, the fees are split by smart contractsA program on the blockchain that moves money by fixed rules everyone can read — no manager’s discretion involved. whose rules anyone can read, and the founder's tokens are locked on-chain where you can check them. What you will not find here: price talk.
Supply
- Lifetime supply cap16.6B XOM
- Circulating at launch~4.13B XOM
- Decimals18
- Rolenetwork fuel (validators pay it for you) + platform use
Disclosure that accompanies any supply discussion: the founder position is ~15% of total supply / ~60% of the opening float — which is exactly why the lockup below exists.
Where fees go
Every protocol fee routes through the UnifiedFeeVault contract and is split by code to the development organization, stakers, treasury, liquidity and referrers. Validators are never direct fee recipients — they earn block rewards, not your trading fees. Referral payouts (70/20/10, two levels) come out of real collected fees, so they cannot exceed what the protocol actually earned.
OmniBazaar
fee routing
All protocol fees → UnifiedFeeVault
Split by contract, not policy
Validators as fee recipients NEVER
Referrer share source real fees only
Founder lockup — live on-chain
95% of the founder's legacy OmniCoin — 2,435,800,000 XOM — is locked in the OmniLegacyVest contract: nothing moves for two years, then the tokens release gradually over five more, with three narrowly defined early-release triggers. A second deployed contract caps the founder's voting power at 7% of supply per address.
Don't take our word for it — the lock is on the public ledger: OmniLegacyVest holds the balance, and OmniVotingPowerCap enforces the voting cap. One honest caveat: the voting cap applies per address, so its real guarantee is visibility — splitting tokens across new wallets to dodge it would be a public, traceable break of trust, not an invisible one. We'd rather you understand the mechanism than trust an adjective.