Limitless Launches Builder Program With Revenue Sharing
Limitless is launching a builder initiative offering revenue sharing, direct team access and liquidity support for developers integrating its prediction markets.

Limitless is expanding its developer outreach, introducing a builder initiative that includes revenue-sharing models, direct team access and liquidity support for partners integrating its prediction markets.
In a post published on X, the platform said it wants to “support builders” integrating its markets by providing a direct communication line with its team, revenue-sharing structures and access to deep liquidity. The announcement directs developers to a dedicated builders page and contact form.
The move signals a shift toward ecosystem expansion, as prediction market platforms increasingly compete not only for traders but also for distribution through third-party applications.
By encouraging external developers to integrate its markets, the company appears to be targeting embedded use cases, including trading dashboards, analytics platforms and consumer-facing applications.
Revenue-sharing models are typically used to incentivize distribution partners, allowing integrators to earn a portion of trading fees or platform-generated revenue tied to referred order flow. Limitless did not disclose specific terms, percentages or eligibility requirements in the public post.
The offer of “deep liquidity” suggests the company is prepared to route or support order flow for integrated markets, addressing a common challenge for emerging prediction platforms where fragmented liquidity can limit adoption.
Developer programs have become a competitive lever in the broader prediction market space. Platforms such as Polymarket have released open-source tooling and APIs aimed at quantitative traders and infrastructure builders. Limitless’s latest announcement focuses more explicitly on partnership economics and hands-on collaboration.
The company directed interested developers to submit details through a contact form, indicating that integrations may be reviewed or coordinated directly rather than launched permissionlessly.
No timeline was provided for when revenue-sharing arrangements would begin or whether the program is limited to selected partners.
As prediction markets seek wider distribution beyond standalone trading interfaces, embedded integrations could become a primary growth channel. Limitless’s builder initiative suggests the platform is positioning itself to capture external developer demand as competition for liquidity and user acquisition intensifies.