Stablecoin lane
Base to Solana
Low-fee route for moving into Solana-native apps, swaps, and wallets.
Open route guideRecovered infrastructure. Real utility.
KishuSwap is being rebuilt as a practical routing tool instead of a hype page. Your wallet stays in control, routes stay transparent, and supported integrator fees stay disclosed.
The embedded Mayan widget handles wallet connections and routing. KishuSwap only wraps the experience and optional integrator settings.
Route activity
Waiting for the widget to finish loading.
Built to be useful on day one:
How it works
Users connect their wallet, pick the source and destination chain, and let the route engine quote the path. The site does not custody funds or pretend to be a new token.
Popular flows
The widget supports more than one lane, but the practical launch focus is getting people between Solana and the cheaper major EVM networks without the old Kishu mess.
Stablecoin lane
Low-fee route for moving into Solana-native apps, swaps, and wallets.
Open route guideTrader lane
Useful when someone wants a quicker jump into Solana liquidity from an EVM bag.
Open route guideExit lane
Cleaner path off expensive L1 activity when users still want to stay in EVM.
Open route guideReturn lane
For users who need to bridge back into the legacy EVM world without custody.
Open route panelWhy someone would use this
Kishu recognition becomes distribution, not the product itself. The value is the tool: quicker wallet flows, cleaner routing, and a familiar domain that still points to something real.
What makes money here
Supported routes can pay a small disclosed KishuSwap integrator fee. The launch target is a light touch that keeps routing competitive instead of squeezing users.
What comes next
Once the bridge is live, this same shell can grow into route comparison, token-risk warnings, or premium holder perks without rebuilding from scratch.
FAQ
The fastest way to lose bridge traffic is acting vague. This answers the obvious questions up front instead of making people guess what kind of site this is.
No. The site is a non-custodial interface layer around third-party routing infrastructure. Users still sign and approve transactions from their own wallets.
On supported routes, KishuSwap adds a disclosed 20 bps integrator fee through the widget configuration. That is 0.20% on eligible routes, not a custody fee or hidden markup.
No. This version is a utility site first. It is not pretending to be a token migration, treasury, or guaranteed investment product.
The current launch shell focuses on Solana plus major EVM chains such as Ethereum, Base, Arbitrum, Optimism, Polygon, Avalanche, and BNB Chain through the embedded widget.
Fee model
The live launch uses a small disclosed referral fee on supported routes. It is set low enough to stay usable while giving the site a real path to revenue.
Routes are powered by third-party infrastructure. Always verify slippage, route fees, and destination addresses before signing transactions.
Operator mode
With payout wallets configured and a modest route fee live, this is now positioned as a revenue-capable utility instead of a dead brand archive.