P2P.org launches Sui, Hyperliquid data feeds
P2P.org has launched Syncro Data Stream for Sui and Hyperliquid, adding real-time on-chain and order-flow feeds for two networks that have drawn growing attention from trading firms and infrastructure providers.[1][8] The service is priced at $2,000 per month per network, a sign that the product is aimed at execution-sensitive users willing to pay for lower-latency data.[1][8]
Overview
- P2P.org launched Syncro Data Stream for Sui and Hyperliquid, extending its validator-based data products beyond the largest legacy chains.[1]
- The feed is sourced from active validator nodes rather than public RPC endpoints, which reduces the delay between network activity and downstream access.[1]
- The product costs $2,000 per network per month and includes a one-week free trial, indicating a commercial push toward professional users.[1][8]
- For Sui, the feed surfaces transaction events at certificate processing before public checkpoint-style distribution, which can matter for latency-sensitive workflows.[1]
- For Hyperliquid, the stream covers full order flow across all assets, a useful input for market makers and quantitative traders.[1][2]
- P2P.org’s pitch is centered on execution and surveillance use cases, but the product’s reach is still limited to two networks at launch.[1][2]
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P2P.org widens its data footprint beyond ETH and BTC
The launch is notable because it pushes institutional-grade blockchain monitoring further into newer ecosystems. P2P.org says Syncro Data Stream delivers data directly from validator nodes “at the data’s point of origin,” rather than through public endpoints, checkpoints, or shared RPC infrastructure.[1] That positioning matters for desks that rely on speed, including market makers, MEV searchers, and quant funds, according to P2P.org’s own product description shared on LinkedIn.[2]
The company has framed the product as a tool for real-time blockchain surveillance and trading infrastructure, not a retail analytics service.[1][2] In practical terms, that means the offering is less about broad blockchain visibility and more about reducing the lag between activity on-chain and the moment that activity becomes tradable or monitorable.
Why Sui and Hyperliquid matter
Sui and Hyperliquid are both part of the newer generation of crypto networks attracting activity outside the ETH/BTC center of gravity. P2P.org’s decision to support them suggests demand for specialized data is broadening as liquidity migrates across chains and venues.[1][8]
For Sui, P2P.org says the feed includes pre-checkpoint transaction events and a secured WebSocket endpoint with client-specific credentials and IP allowlisting.[1] For Hyperliquid, the stream is positioned around complete order-flow coverage, which is more directly relevant to trading than conventional end-of-day analytics.[1][2] Market participants view that as useful for price discovery, even if the launch does not by itself prove sustained institutional adoption.
| Network | Data offered | Primary use case | Commercial detail |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sui | Transaction events at certificate processing, streamed in real time[1] | Latency-sensitive monitoring and execution[1] | $2,000/month, one-week trial[1][8] |
| Hyperliquid | Full order flow across assets, plus error and metrics channels[1] | Trading, routing, and market surveillance[1][2] | $2,000/month, one-week trial[1][8] |
Institutional surveillance is expanding, but the addressable market is narrower
The product launch fits a broader market trend: infrastructure providers are packaging raw blockchain data into paid feeds aimed at professional users. That shift matters because it shows how on-chain surveillance is moving from general analytics into specialized market plumbing, especially on networks where speed and order-flow visibility can affect trading behavior.[1][2]
At the same time, the commercial opportunity remains concentrated. P2P.org has not disclosed client numbers, and the launch materials do not show how much demand exists outside a relatively small set of trading desks and infrastructure teams.[1][2] Interpretation based on available data: the pricing and feature set suggest a niche institutional market rather than a mass-adoption product.
| Feature | P2P.org Syncro Data Stream | Public RPC / checkpoint feeds |
|---|---|---|
| Data source | Active validator nodes[1] | Shared public infrastructure[1] |
| Delivery speed | Real-time / pre-checkpoint on Sui[1] | Later propagation through the network[1][2] |
| Target user | Market makers, MEV searchers, quant funds[2] | Broad developer and application access |
| Pricing | $2,000 per network per month[1][8] | Typically lower or public-access models |
Risks, limits and what is still unknown
The main limitation is scope. The launch covers only two networks, so it does not yet establish a broad surveillance platform across the market’s largest assets.[1] It also remains unclear how many institutions will pay for dedicated feeds when existing public data sources are available, even if they are slower.[1][2]
A second uncertainty is durability. Demand for low-latency data tends to rise when volatility, arbitrage and order-book fragmentation increase, but those conditions can change quickly. If activity on Sui or Hyperliquid cools, the value proposition for a premium feed could narrow, especially if competing infrastructure providers offer similar products at lower cost.
P2P.org’s move points to a market where institutional on-chain monitoring is becoming more granular and more commercial, but the real test will be whether trading firms treat Sui and Hyperliquid as enduring venues worth paying for, or as another short-lived expansion of crypto data spend.









