How it works
Arbitrum produces a new block approximately every few milliseconds, which we forward directly to the sequencer to avoid impacting inclusion times.
When a transaction is sent via Blink, we share it with our trusted searcher network. Searchers may submit backrun transactions to capture arbitrage opportunities. For transactions that successfully land on-chain and are backrun, Blink may return a portion of that value to the transaction originator.
Transactions that revert, fail, or are not included on-chain are not eligible for refunds or value sharing.
Flow Overview
Transaction Submission
Users submit transactions through Blink interface
Transactions are immediately processed for searcher distribution
Searcher Integration
Vetted searchers receive transaction details
Searchers analyze for profitable backrun opportunities
Execution happens within the same block when possible
Profit Distribution
Searchers capture arbitrage value through backrun transactions
Automated profit-sharing mechanism returns value to original transaction senders
Transparent tracking ensures fair distribution
Differences with Ethereum
1. Cheaper gas = higher quantity of profitable Opportunities
Because it's cheaper to send transactions on Arbitrum, the point at which opportunities become profitable for searchers is lower. This means that much lower value transactions can provide value back.
2. No Builders
There are no builders on Arbitrum. Transactions are ordered based on first come first served principles. There is a small speed bump for transactions not submitted via TimeBoost.
3. No Mempool
As the foundation runs the sequencer, a public mempool is not necessary. This means there is no way for users to be explicitly "sandwiched" by MEV bots.
However, sandwich attacks still occur on Arbitrum. Please reach out to us if you're interested in more details.
4. No "Bundles"
There is no concept of "bundles" on Arbitrum. This means it's harder to attribute value recovered from the searcher.
Despite there being no bundles, Blink has a number of innovative approaches to attribute recoveries for originator transactions that are successfully included on-chain and pass that back to the originator of the transaction.
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