The Nottingham Fair

Where LOOT trades — and where the protocol itself shops every hour, burning what it buys.

How it works
I
Trade freely

A native constant-product pool (x·y=k, 0.3% fee to liquidity providers). Buy LOOT with ETH or sell it back — no orderbook, no listings, no permission.

II
The buyback shops here

Every hour, up to half the protocol's fee pot buys LOOT at this very market. 60% is burned, 10% pays the staking camp, 30% is locked as liquidity forever.

III
Price has a floor story

The game tracks its own mining cost (fees paid per LOOT minted) on-chain — shown below the price. When market price nears mining cost, minting and buying converge.

Why LOOT is scarce

Supply is hard-capped at 5,000,000and only the game can mint — along a curve that pays more when rounds are deep and decays as lifetime supply grows. Against that trickle stand three sinks: the lottery's permanent ticket burn, the hourly buyback burn, and liquidity locked forever.

Emission math, difficulty and the production-cost anchor are in the docs.

The Nottingham Fair

1 LOOT ≈ 0 ETH

The only market in the wood. Every hour the protocol spends its toll here buying LOOT — 60% burned, 10% to stakers, 30% locked as liquidity forever.

ETH
you get ≈ 0 LOOT

Connect your wallet to trade.