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No. 0x1 is non-custodial. Your deposits, margin, and withdrawals all settle directly against your Aster account. 0x1 never takes possession of your funds at any point.The mirror engine acts on your behalf using an agent key — a delegated signing key that can place orders on your Aster account within the bounds of the limits you set. You can rotate or revoke this key at any time from the Security section of your dashboard. See Security for a full explanation of how agent keys work.
As a follower, you pay one fee: the mirror trader fee set by the mirror trader you follow, charged as a percentage of the notional volume you generate when mirroring them. That fee is capped at 0.1% (10 bps) by the platform.The mirror trader fee goes 100% to the mirror trader. 0x1 takes no share of it. There are no subscription fees, deposit fees, or withdrawal fees. Aster’s own exchange fees apply to all trades as normal.0x1 generates platform revenue from separate value-added services such as wallet tracking. Details on the full model will be shared separately once ready.
The token design — including token structure, staking tiers, ve-locking, revenue distribution, and buyback/burn mechanics — is currently under review (TBD). Details will be published on the Tokens, Token Economy, Issuance, and Tokenomics Whitepaper pages once finalized.
No. All core features — mirroring traders, monitoring positions, withdrawing — are available without any token balance.
You set your own leverage cap when you configure a mirror, up to a maximum of 20×. The engine will never apply leverage above the cap you set, even if the mirror trader you are following uses higher leverage on their own account. If the mirror trader’s position would require higher leverage than your cap allows, the engine sizes your position down proportionally instead of skipping the trade.The default cap when starting a new mirror is 5×. You can adjust it on any active mirror at any time.
Slippage tolerance is the maximum price movement between when a signal is detected and when your order fills that the engine will accept. If the market moves more than your tolerance in the time it takes to route your order, the engine skips that trade instead of filling you at a worse price.The default is 0.5%. For most liquid Aster perp markets and normal market conditions, this is sufficient. In volatile conditions or for less liquid assets, you may want to widen this — but a higher tolerance means you accept more slippage on individual fills in exchange for fewer skipped trades.
When you stop a mirror, two things happen: the mirror binding is removed (no more new trades from that mirror trader will appear on your account) and your open positions from that mirror are closed at market. If you want to keep your existing positions open but stop receiving new ones, use Pause instead of Stop.
Yes. Your settled balance (unrealized PnL is not settled) is available for withdrawal at any time regardless of open positions. Withdrawing does not close or affect your open mirror positions. If your withdrawal reduces your account balance below the margin required to support open positions, Aster’s own margin system applies — 0x1 does not gate withdrawals above your settled balance.
There is no platform-imposed minimum. The practical minimum is set by Aster’s minimum order size for the asset the mirror trader is trading. If your allocation and proportional sizing would result in an order below Aster’s minimum, the engine skips that specific trade and logs the skip to your activity feed with a reason.Starting with at least a few hundred USDT in allocated margin is recommended for most followers, to ensure the engine can mirror most order sizes without systematic skipping.
The default sort is 30-day net realized PnL — the total profit and loss on closed positions over the last 30 days, after the mirror trader’s own fees on the exchange. You can also sort by win rate, drawdown, volume, and time period (7 / 30 / 90 days). The leaderboard only includes mirror traders who have connected their Aster account to 0x1 and have active trading history in the selected window.
Each mirror trader sets their own fee on the volume their followers generate, from 0% up to 0.1% (10 bps). You pay this fee on the notional volume of every order the engine places on your behalf, whether that order was profitable or not. The fee goes entirely to the mirror trader.The leaderboard shows each mirror trader’s net return — the return after their fee — so you are comparing apples to apples across different fee levels. A high-fee mirror trader with outsized net returns can still be the better choice over a zero-fee mirror trader with modest ones.
Yes. You can mirror as many mirror traders as you want simultaneously. Each mirror has its own allocation, leverage cap, and slippage tolerance. Your total allocation across all active mirrors can exceed your account balance — in that case, orders are filled in the order they arrive, and later orders may be limited by available margin.
Season 1 is a head-to-head mirror-trading competition between Korean and Japanese traders on Aster. Mirror traders compete in teams; followers can attach to competing teams and earn participation rewards.See the Season 1 overview for full details on format, dates, and how to join.
KYC is not required to use the mirror trading features — signing in and mirroring mirror traders does not require identity verification. KYC may be required to claim rewards from Partnership seasons, and for mirror traders who want to register for a competing team.
0x1 provisions embedded wallets via Privy for users who sign in with email or Google. The private key for an embedded wallet is never exposed to 0x1 in plaintext. If you connect an external wallet (MetaMask, OKX, etc.), your private key never leaves your wallet software.The agent key — the delegated key the mirror engine uses to place orders on Aster — is separate from your wallet private key. It is scoped to Aster order placement only, encrypted at rest, and can be revoked at any time. See Security for the full technical explanation.