A DeFi protocol running on BNB Chain introduces an interesting automated token management approach. The mechanism works by accumulating transaction slippage, which then automatically triggers buyback and token burn events based on the protocol's smart contract design.



This type of deflationary model has become increasingly common among projects seeking to maintain scarcity and potentially support token price dynamics. The on-chain automation removes manual intervention, letting the protocol execute token repurchases and destruction according to predefined conditions whenever threshold requirements are met.
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ser_we_are_ngmivip
· 01-20 10:31
Everyone's tired of the automatic buyback and burn routine; let's see how long it can last in the end.
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AirdropAutomatonvip
· 01-19 20:39
Another deflationary model... This approach is all worn out, the key is whether it can truly boost the market.
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LayerZeroHerovip
· 01-17 17:05
It's the automatic destruction mechanism again. Isn't this trick already worn out?
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EyeOfTheTokenStormvip
· 01-17 17:05
It's the same deflationary model again... According to my quantitative analysis, historical data for this type of project shows they become invalid within 6 months, posing extremely high risks.
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AirdropHuntressvip
· 01-17 17:05
It looks like the old routine again—slippage accumulation triggers buyback and burn. This kind of tokenomics design is already everywhere. The key is to look at on-chain data; whether the burn volume is genuine or not. Don't just listen to the project team hype.
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fork_in_the_roadvip
· 01-17 17:05
Is it that automatic destruction again? Can it really pump the market?
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CodeAuditQueenvip
· 01-17 16:55
Slippage stacking triggers destruction? It depends on whether the smart contract has reentrancy vulnerabilities; otherwise, it's just handing the hackers an easy target.
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BloodInStreetsvip
· 01-17 16:41
It's the same trick of reducing circulating supply again. To put it simply, they want to support the price through burns. Slippage accumulation triggers buybacks—sounds automated, but in reality? When the bear market hits, this mechanism is useless; no one trades, so where does the slippage come from?
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