Hi! I wanted to ask whether you've considered introducing some form of maker fee rebates. I'm a very active trader on the Up/Down markets (you can see my stats in the screenshot). At least $220k of that volume was from maker orders. If I had traded the exact same strategy on Polymarket, I would have earned roughly $1,500 in maker rebates. On Predict.fun, however, I receive nothing in return—not even points, because my orders are typically 20–50 shares, which is below the minimum threshold for the points program. It feels a bit unfair that the current incentives reward posting large amounts of volume that often isn't intended to trade (I think everyone understands how most people farm points), while traders who provide real liquidity that actually gets filled receive no advantage at all. I think it would be great if Predict.fun introduced either: direct maker fee rebates, or some kind of points bonus for maker orders that actually get executed, even if they're smaller than 100 shares. That would reward genuine liquidity provision instead of simply incentivizing large posted order sizes.
Hi! I wanted to ask whether you've considered introducing some form of maker fee rebates. I'm a very active trader on the Up/Down markets (you can see my stats in the screenshot). At least $220k of that volume was from maker orders. If I had traded the exact same strategy on Polymarket, I would have earned roughly $1,500 in maker rebates. On Predict.fun, however, I receive nothing in return—not even points, because my orders are typically 20–50 shares, which is below the minimum threshold for the points program. It feels a bit unfair that the current incentives reward posting large amounts of volume that often isn't intended to trade (I think everyone understands how most people farm points), while traders who provide real liquidity that actually gets filled receive no advantage at all. I think it would be great if Predict.fun introduced either: direct maker fee rebates, or some kind of points bonus for maker orders that actually get executed, even if they're smaller than 100 shares. That would reward genuine liquidity provision instead of simply incentivizing large posted order sizes.