TL;DR
Aster Code is stepping into the perpetual DEX infrastructure race with a framework designed to make onchain derivatives easier to build. The pitch is not just faster coding, but a modular backend meant to lower the cost and complexity of launching perp-focused products. The project describes itself as Web3 development infrastructure built specifically for the perpetual futures DEX sector, using a two-layer architecture that separates a high-performance engine from open interfaces above it. That structure is intended to simplify contract transactions, high-frequency trade matching, liquidation, settlement, and market-level customization for developers and users alike globally.
At the base sits the heavy machinery, while the upper layer is meant to make that machinery usable by outside builders. Aster Code says the lower layer handles demanding execution work, while the upper layer exposes standard interfaces so teams can call modules and adjust market parameters without rebuilding everything from scratch. The company also says it offers customized solutions for traditional financial institutions, Web3 ecosystem funds, and other entrants trying to move into onchain derivatives. The broader ambition is to reduce build time and open the perp DEX stack to more participants across markets.

The partner list gives the framework a more concrete shape, because it shows Aster Code is trying to plug into wallets, terminals, social trading platforms, and AI-native interfaces from the start. The first batch includes Binance Wallet, Trust Wallet, SafePal, Genius Terminal, Polarise, NOFA, Wallet V, ChimpX, Speculr, and VergeX. Across those integrations, the repeated themes are self-custody, multichain access, high-leverage perps, AI-assisted trading, copy trading, and easier execution inside familiar user environments. In practical terms, Aster Code is being positioned as the execution layer behind multiple front-end experiences for onchain trading products today broadly.
The longer-term roadmap suggests Aster does not want this to remain a developer toolkit alone, but an ecosystem program with capital, distribution and product iteration built in. The project says it plans to launch an Aster Code Ecosystem Fund to support partners with financing, technical incubation, resource connections, and marketing help. It also wants deeper collaboration with projects such as Lista and FOUR.MEME, alongside continued work on account systems and fee structures. The message is straightforward: Aster Code is trying to become infrastructure, launch support, and growth coordination for perp DEX builders at once globally.