Orbs is transferring control of its Layer-3 trading protocol and multi-million dollar fee flow to a new DAO, with seasonal on-chain governance to keep pace with volatile DeFi markets.
Orbs has launched a decentralized autonomous organization (DAO) that will shift control of protocol decisions and revenue allocation away from key contributors to the global community in the coming weeks, formalizing a move toward full on-chain governance for its Layer-3 trading infrastructure.
The Tel Aviv-based protocol, which specializes in execution-layer infrastructure for advanced onchain trading, says the launch of DAO follows years of product implementation, integrations and regulatory preparation, rather than a rush to decentralize.
Orbs’ family of live Layer-3 protocols – including dLIMIT, dTWAP, Liquidity Hub, Perpetual Hub, and dSLTP – have processed over $3 billion in cumulative trading volume to date and generated over $3 million in protocol revenue, through more than 30 decentralized exchange integrations on multiple chains and backed by over 1 billion staked ORBS tokens.
“Governance only works when there is something real to govern,” says Ran Hammer, Chief Business Officer at Orbs, arguing that the DAO will only take off once the protocol has meaningful products, revenue and adoption.
“After years of building products, monetizing and scaling adoption, we are now in a position where the community can actively shape the future of the protocol with real data and real impact,” Hammer added.
The new DAO will control key levers of the protocol, including how fees generated by Orbs’ trading products are allocated, token economic parameters, network upgrades, validator oversight and ecosystem subsidies, putting the allocation of revenue and resources in the hands of token holders rather than a centralized team.
A defining feature is the seasonal governance model, where decisions are made in defined cycles, allowing the community to revise priorities, adjust tokenomics, and reallocate resources as market conditions evolve, unlike static governance frameworks adopted by some previous DeFi protocols.
The rollout will begin with two initial on-chain votes: one to ratify the DAO’s core structure, voting mechanisms, and operational framework, and a second to define the “Season 1” tokenomics, including how protocol revenues will be distributed between token burns, staking incentives, liquidity provisions, and treasury reserves.
Orbs said the DAO is expanding its existing governance architecture of Guardians and Delegators, who currently secure the network through Proof-of-Stake and participate in decision-making, into a broader protocol-level model for capital allocation and long-term strategy.
The move comes as more decentralized finance projects focus on revenue management, with protocols like Uniswap and others activating or expanding rate switches and treasury control as DeFi matures into a cash flow-generating sector that is being scrutinized by both institutional and retail investors.
Within this context, Orbs is positioning its DAO as a way to align a revenue-generating Layer-3 infrastructure network with its token holders at a time when sophisticated execution tools and real economic flows – not just speculative governance tokens – are increasingly defining competitive advantage in on-chain markets.

