Hypertrade — DEX Aggregator for Optimal Swaps
Hypertrade unifies HyperCore and HyperEVM liquidity, continuously recalculates the best path, and protects users with slippage and MEV-aware execution — all from one interface.

What a DEX aggregator does
A DEX aggregator pulls liquidity from multiple exchanges to deliver the best available rate in one place. For Hypertrade, that means combining HyperCore Spot order books with HyperEVM AMMs so users get deeper depth and lower slippage without hopping between venues.
The Hypertrade workflow
- Stage 1: Search liquidity — The R1 router queries HyperCore Spot and HyperEVM DEXs (Hyperswap, Kittenswap, more) to gather quotes and depth.
- Stage 2: Calculate the path — Advanced graph heuristics test multi-hop paths and split trades when it improves net output after gas and fees.
- Stage 3: Execute with guardrails — The swap is sent to the smart contract with slippage and deadline limits; quotes are rechecked to stay close to previewed output.
Key advantages
- Best rates and accurate quotes by aggregating deep liquidity in one interface.
- Minimized slippage through smart order splitting across multiple pools.
- Multi-network access inside the Hyperliquid ecosystem without juggling tabs.
- User privacy by keeping custody in your wallet; no KYC required.
- Time and gas savings for active traders who no longer need manual checks.
Networks and positioning
Hypertrade’s R1 router is one of the first to support both HyperCore and HyperEVM. Accessing order-book depth plus AMM liquidity in one window reduces fragmentation, improves capital efficiency, and expands token coverage across the Hyperliquid ecosystem.
Make your first swap
- Connect your wallet (MetaMask, WalletConnect, Coinbase Wallet).
- Select tokens and amount; pick a route if multiple are offered.
- Get quotes and review expected output plus estimated slippage.
- Set slippage tolerance, gas limits, and a deadline that fits market conditions.
- Approve token spending if prompted, then confirm the swap and wait for finality.
Tip: keep HYPE on hand for gas, and set slippage between 0.1–1% based on the pair’s liquidity and volatility.
Troubleshooting common errors
- “Insufficient output amount”: increase slippage slightly or reduce size.
- Transaction failed: recheck gas and network status; try again with updated limits.
- Deadline exceeded: extend the deadline or execute during calmer network periods.
How it works under the hood
- Liquidity aggregation: normalize quotes from AMMs and order books while including fees and gas.
- Route-finding: split orders, build multi-hop paths, and assess MEV and slippage risk before execution.
- Execution safeguards: slippage bounds, deadlines, and re-quoting when markets move sharply.
MEV protection in practice
Hyperliquid’s deterministic ordering narrows the MEV surface, and Hypertrade layers user controls on top.
- Use private RPC endpoints when available.
- Set reasonable minReturn or slippage limits.
- Break very large swaps into smaller chunks when market depth is thin.

