Okay, degens, we are gonna try and break this down to a point where you don’t really need a computer science degree to understand it.
Basically, it doesn’t matter how fragmented your assets are anymore. If you wanna use them to provide liquidity on Kim, it’s gonna be easier than ever.
Don’t (just) thank us, thank the folks at Router Protocol for staying in school and not getting stoned 24/7 so they can actually write code (i promise our tech team can, too, but our marketing team cannot).
The Router team has collaborated with Kim on the Kim LP Adapter, take a look at some of the super-duper-smart contracts and how it works below or, if you’re so inclined and you’re smart enough.
The Kim Adapter integrates multiple steps into a seamless process:
BatchTransaction.sol: Initiate your transaction on the source chain.
NitroAdapter.sol: This triggers the Nitro bridge for cross-chain transfers.
Destination Processing: On the destination chain, BatchTransaction activates DexSpan for token swaps.
Final Step: The Kim Adapter adds liquidity, returning your liquidity position easily.
Yada, yada, yada. Don’t worry if you thought that .sol was .Solana - it’s not, it’s .solidity, the programming language of Ethereum and (most) EVM chains. We (KIM MARKETING NOT DEVS) made the same mistake (/s).
Wanna get started? Seamlessly leverage your assets on other chains to provide liquidity to Kim through this beautiful, extraordinary, user-interface, courtesy of Router, here.
We’ll try our best to answer and/or palm you off to Router.