Despite being delayed until 2021 due to internal problems, Trident is finally operational on Polygon's sidechain (MATIC). This profile was created by some of the Sushi team. Sushi is the fourth largest decentralised exchange, with $3.63 billion invested in more than 16 blockchains.
Therefore, in order to reduce petrol and to have a large mass of people using this novel feature, the institution decided to deploy the first version on the Polygon blockchain.
This first trial of Trident is just the beginning. In fact, the protocol in its current phase is no different from the simple token exchange that is already available on the DEX with the tender title of the typical Japanese dish.
Based on audits of each of Trident's options, Trident will move forward. The group wants to protect the participants at the cost of a bad job that can lead to the destruction of the funds.
With the exception of SushiSwap V1, Trident suggests being a production scheme to elaborate and develop AMMs. That is, it lets members generate their own pools of liquidity, similar to what the rival decentralised exchange Uniswap proposes. Also, members who already contribute liquidity to a V1 pool on Polygon can already migrate their positions to Trident.
Trident also aims to homogenise the way liquidity pools are created using its new IPool interface, which it describes as the "crux" of Trident's production scheme. Just as the ERC-20 token standard is needed for token types to be efficient, the IPool standard is needed for liquidity pools to be more efficient.