// GUIDE

Orbis NFT Marketplace: Aggregated Trading

Orbis is the third Solana NFT marketplace Chadbot speaks natively — and it's aggregated, not bolted on. Its listings, offers and volume join Tensor and Magic Eden in one order book, one screener and one bot engine. Here's what that unlocks, and how to trade it.

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Quick answer
Orbis (orbisonsol.io) is a Solana NFT marketplace, now aggregated inside Chadbot alongside Tensor and Magic Eden. Its order book, offers and volume show up in the same unified grid, live screener and wallet activity as the other two venues, so you trade all three from one place. You can buy, sell, make and accept offers on Orbis, run collection-bid bots and AMM pools on supported collections, and pick Orbis as a cross-listing venue.
Orbis NFT marketplace logo
ORBISnow aggregated in Chadbot

Trade it in the same order book, screener and bots you already use for Tensor and Magic Eden.

unified order book · tensor + magic eden + orbis
#7731 best buy4.08
#04204.16
#00914.42
#18424.68
#33104.78
three marketplaces · one book · best price wins
Orbis liquidity merges into the same book as Tensor and Magic Eden — Chadbot floats the cheapest ask to the top, whichever venue it's on, one click from buying.
// Key takeaways
  • Orbis is aggregated, not linked out — its listings/offers/volume sit in the same book as Tensor and Magic Eden.
  • The screener and collection grid surface the cheapest ask across all three venues — sometimes that's Orbis.
  • Full trading: buy, sell, list, and make/accept single-NFT or collection offers on Orbis.
  • Bots run on Orbis — collection bids and AMM pools on supported collections, plus Orbis as a relist venue.
  • Orbis offers escrow into the offer itself — no shared-escrow wallet to fund; cancel returns your SOL in full.
  • Listing on Orbis costs the seller 2% + enforced royalty, so auto-relists are grossed up to break even.

What is Orbis?

Orbis (orbisonsol.io) is a Solana NFT marketplace. Its listings, bids and offers settle natively on-chain, and Chadbot reads that order book directly — so Orbis sits next to Tensor and Magic Eden everywhere you trade, instead of being a separate tab you have to check.

What “aggregation” means here

Plenty of tools link out to other marketplaces. Aggregation is different: Chadbot reads the Orbis order book and merges it into the same data that powers everything else. Concretely:

  • Collection pages show Orbis listings beside Tensor and Magic Eden, sorted into one price ladder.
  • The live screener counts Orbis volume in its rolling-window rankings and buy/sell sentiment.
  • Your wallet activity folds Orbis trades, listings and offers into the same timeline, with the Orbis mark on each row.
  • The marketplace filter on wallet pages lets you isolate Orbis-only activity — or see all three together.

The payoff is simple: the best price wins regardless of venue. If the cheapest ask for a collection is on Orbis, that's what floats to the top — and you're one click from taking it.

Trading on Orbis through Chadbot

Orbis is a first-class trading venue, not a read-only feed. From the same UI you use for Tensor and Magic Eden you can:

  • Buy an Orbis listing directly — the transaction is built, signed locally and submitted; nothing leaves your wallet's control.
  • List and reprice NFTs you hold on Orbis (a reprice is a cancel-and-relist under the hood, since Orbis has no in-place edit).
  • Make offers — single-NFT bids or collection-wide offers — with the SOL escrowed into the offer account on-chain.
  • Accept offers on NFTs you own, including collection offers, straight from the NFT or wallet page.

Running bots on Orbis

The automation that makes Chadbot Chadbot extends to Orbis on supported collections:

  • Collection-bid bots keep a live, competitive offer on a collection and re-price it for you — see how auto-bidding works.
  • AMM / MMM pools quote along a price curve on Orbis: buy down the curve, relist into the spread, hands-free.
  • Cross-marketplace relisting treats Orbis as a venue you can pick — buy where it's cheap, relist where it sells.

Two Orbis-specific differences are worth knowing. First, Orbis bot bids are collection-widetrait-scoped bids run on Magic Eden and Tensor instead. Second, there's no shared-escrow wallet for Orbis bids: each offer escrows its own SOL on-chain, so you fund nothing up front and a cancel refunds in full.

The break-even rule for Orbis listings

When you sell on Orbis, the seller pays a 2% marketplace fee plus the collection's enforced royalty, both deducted from the sale price. So a naive flip that relists at the exact buy price actually clears below cost. To break even you have to list above your cost by at least fee + royalty.

Let the bot do the break-even math
Chadbot's listing bot grosses up the minimum Orbis price by the fee + royalty automatically, so an auto-relist of a bot-bought NFT clears your cost instead of leaking it to fees. You set the margin you want on top; the deductions are handled for you.
Confirm fills from the chain, not the feed
Feeds drop events; the chain doesn't. Chadbot's Orbis AMM confirms a fill from the on-chain settlement and reads the real net proceeds from the wallet's balance change — fees and royalty already subtracted — so the relist price is based on what you actually received.

Orbis at a glance

Orbis on Chadbot
In the aggregate viewYes — listings, offers, volume merged with Tensor + Magic Eden
TradingBuy, list/reprice, make & accept offers
Bot bidsCollection-wide (no trait bids)
AMM poolsSupported on eligible collections
EscrowPer-offer on-chain — no shared-escrow wallet
Seller cost2% fee + enforced royalty (auto grossed-up)

Why it matters

  • More liquidity, one screen. A third venue in the book means more asks to buy under and more bids to sell into — without a third tab.
  • Same bots, third venue. The collection-bid and AMM automation you already run extends to Orbis — no new workflow to learn.
  • True cost accounting. Break-even gross-up and chain-confirmed fills mean auto-relists price off what you really netted, not a hopeful number.

Set it up

  1. Find an Orbis collection in the discovery grid or the screener — Orbis asks sit next to Tensor and Magic Eden.
  2. Buy or bid — take an Orbis listing, or place a collection offer that escrows on-chain.
  3. Make or accept offers on single NFTs or whole collections.
  4. Automate it — start a collection-bid bot or an AMM pool from the bots page.
  5. Choose your relist venue — route bot-bought NFTs to Orbis, Tensor or Magic Eden, priced to break even.

FAQ

What is Orbis?

Orbis (orbisonsol.io) is a Solana NFT marketplace. Its listings, bids and offers settle natively on-chain, and Chadbot aggregates the Orbis order book alongside Tensor and Magic Eden so you trade all three from one interface.

Is Orbis aggregated with Tensor and Magic Eden in Chadbot?

Yes. Chadbot folds the Orbis order book into the same unified view as Tensor and Magic Eden — Orbis listings, offers and volume appear alongside the other two venues in the collection grid, the live screener and your wallet activity, so you act on liquidity from all three at once.

Can I run trading bots on Orbis?

Yes. Chadbot runs collection-bid bots and AMM (market-making) pools on supported Orbis collections, and Orbis is a selectable venue for cross-marketplace relisting — so a bot that buys on any venue can relist on Orbis, or an Orbis-bought NFT can relist on Tensor or Magic Eden.

Why don't Orbis bots support trait bidding?

Orbis bot bidding is collection-wide. Trait-scoped automated bids run on Magic Eden (which also covers Metaplex Core collections Tensor can't) and Tensor. On Orbis, Chadbot focuses on collection bids and AMM market-making.

Do Orbis bids need a shared escrow wallet?

No. An Orbis offer locks its SOL into the offer account itself on-chain at the moment you make it — there's no separate shared-escrow wallet to pre-fund. Cancel an unfilled offer and the SOL returns to you in full.

Why can't I relist on Orbis at the exact price I paid?

On Orbis the seller pays a 2% marketplace fee plus the collection's enforced royalty, both deducted from the sale price. To break even on a flip you must list above your cost by at least fee + royalty. Chadbot's listing bot grosses this up automatically so an auto-relist clears your cost instead of selling at a loss.

Orbis slots into the same playbook as the rest: aggregate the venues, then automate. Pair it with auto-bidding or an AMM pool to accumulate, cross-marketplace relisting to sell where it's best, and the live screener to time it — across Tensor, Magic Eden and Orbis at once.

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