For the fees, every time a transaction is made with the pair (i.e. swap.Hive and Leo), a small percentage of that transaction is added into your pool. For instance, and using hypothetical numbers here, 6 Leo is exchange for 1 swap.Hive, and you own 1% of that pool --> you earn a tiny bit of Leo (maybe 0.00001) and swap.Hive (maybe 0.00000001) and that amount is "deposited" into the pool as if you invested additional swap.Hive and Leo.
For all other rewards, those are chosen by the creators of the pool - they can distribute rewards however they like, whether through other 2nd layer tokens or through wrapped Hive (swap.Hive). It's typically also based on the % of the liquidity that's provided.
That's likely going to be for the creators of liquidity pools - they add in other 2nd layer tokens (or swap.Hive) and those are distributed as rewards, to my understanding.
For the fees, every time a transaction is made with the pair (i.e. swap.Hive and Leo), a small percentage of that transaction is added into your pool. For instance, and using hypothetical numbers here, 6 Leo is exchange for 1 swap.Hive, and you own 1% of that pool --> you earn a tiny bit of Leo (maybe 0.00001) and swap.Hive (maybe 0.00000001) and that amount is "deposited" into the pool as if you invested additional swap.Hive and Leo.
For all other rewards, those are chosen by the creators of the pool - they can distribute rewards however they like, whether through other 2nd layer tokens or through wrapped Hive (swap.Hive). It's typically also based on the % of the liquidity that's provided.
Yeah that's what I didn't understand, on tribal dex you have the ability to 'add rewards'
That's likely going to be for the creators of liquidity pools - they add in other 2nd layer tokens (or swap.Hive) and those are distributed as rewards, to my understanding.