Flipper launched an upgraded, AI‑enhanced decentralized exchange (DEX) aggregator on Solana, rolling the protocol to mainnet in a Minimum Viable Product (MVP) state. The release combined AI-assisted trade routing, advanced order types and non‑custodial execution aimed at lowering slippage and automating execution for on‑chain traders.
Flipper’s update introduced a set of features targeting both execution efficiency and trader controls. The core innovation was the AI‑driven “Smart Swaps” aggregator, which analyzed liquidity pools across Solana venues—cited targets included Raydium Whirlpool, Orca and Meteora—and selected multi‑hop routes inside a single transaction to secure better rates with built‑in slippage protection and WSOL support.
The update mattered because it paired high‑frequency routing across Solana liquidity venues with AI analytics that suggested entry and exit points—functionality intended to reduce manual overhead for traders and surface more efficient swap paths.
Security, deployment and roadmap
Flipper deployed the MVP on Solana mainnet at the address reported in the announcement, and internal testing covered swaps, orders and routing performance. The team emphasized route validation, audits of connected smart contracts and continuous event monitoring as primary defenses against MEV and common wallet‑drainer vectors. Integration with Telegram provided an accessible interface for the AI co‑pilot and signals.
Looking ahead, the protocol set out a roadmap that planned connections to additional liquidity sources—Saber, Orca TokenSwap, OpenBook, Phoenix and Raydium CLMM—plus features such as oracle‑driven automatic execution, enhanced AI sentiment analysis, gas optimization and developer APIs. The project also flagged a forthcoming native token with airdrops and staking to incentivize early users.
For traders and liquidity providers, the release narrowed friction for rate discovery on Solana and brought advanced order types on‑chain; for security‑minded users, the non‑custodial design and stated audit processes reduced counterparty exposure but did not eliminate smart‑contract risk.
Investors and integrators will now measure the update by routing efficiency in live conditions, order execution reliability and how quickly planned integrations and the token mechanics materialize—factors that will determine whether the protocol scales beyond MVP into broader adoption.
