Supported assets on VVS Finance
Because VVS is a permissionless AMM, the honest answer to "what can I trade?" is: almost any Cronos token someone has created a pool for. That freedom is powerful and a little dangerous — so the more useful skill is knowing the main asset categories and how to verify a token before you touch it.
The main categories
The assets you'll meet on VVS fall into a few recognizable groups. Liquidity and reliability are generally deepest at the top of this list and thinnest at the bottom.
CRO and wrapped CRO (WCRO)
CRO is the native coin of Cronos and the gas that pays for every transaction. Inside pools, the wrapped version WCRO is used so the native coin behaves like a standard CRC-20 token — the interface usually wraps and unwraps it for you. CRO pairs are typically the deepest and most actively traded on the platform.
Stablecoins
Dollar-pegged tokens such as USDC and USDT (in their Cronos forms) are the backbone of low-volatility trading and the safest side of a liquidity pair from an impermanent-loss standpoint. A stablecoin/stablecoin pool barely diverges, which is why cautious liquidity providers favour them. Note that not all "stablecoins" are equal — they differ in backing and issuer — so know what you're holding.
Bridged major assets
Large-cap assets that originate on other chains — wrapped Bitcoin, wrapped Ether and similar — appear on Cronos as bridged tokens. They let Cronos users gain exposure to majors, but they add bridge risk: you're trusting the bridge that issued the Cronos-side token. Prefer well-established bridged representations and confirm which bridge stands behind one.
Cronos-native and partner tokens
Projects built on Cronos list their tokens here, often launching liquidity through VVS or its IGO launchpad. This is where the most opportunity and the most risk live: deep, reputable projects sit alongside brand-new and unaudited ones. Treat anything unfamiliar with extra caution.
| Category | Examples (forms vary) | Typical liquidity | Main thing to check |
|---|---|---|---|
| Native / wrapped | CRO, WCRO | Deepest | That you hold gas (CRO) for fees |
| Stablecoins | USDC, USDT (Cronos) | Deep | Issuer and backing of the specific token |
| Bridged majors | Wrapped BTC / ETH | Moderate | Which bridge issued it |
| Cronos-native / partner | Ecosystem & new project tokens | Varies widely | Contract address & project legitimacy |
How "listing" actually works on an AMM
There's no listing committee. Anyone can deploy a token and create a pool for it, which is why a name and logo prove nothing — scam tokens routinely impersonate real ones. The only thing that uniquely identifies a token is its contract address. A familiar ticker with an unfamiliar address is a red flag, full stop.
Before you swap or pool an unfamiliar token, confirm its contract address through the project's own official channels or a reputable Cronos explorer or data tracker. Do not trust an address from a chat message, a search ad, or a link a stranger sent you. One wrong address can mean trading a worthless impostor token.
A short verification routine
- Find the address from a trusted source — the project's official site or socials, or a major data aggregator — not from the swap link you were handed.
- Match it exactly against the token shown in the interface. Beware lookalikes that differ by a character or two.
- Check liquidity and history on an explorer or tracker. Brand-new tokens with thin liquidity and anonymous teams deserve extra skepticism.
- Start small with anything unfamiliar, and never approve unlimited spending you don't need to.
Why this page doesn't list live pairs
The exact set of pools and their depths changes daily, and any list we printed would be outdated and — worse — could lull you into trusting a token by name. The durable skill is the verification habit above. For live, current pairs and depths, use a reputable Cronos data tracker or explorer, and cross-check tokens against official project channels.
Once you can verify an asset confidently, the rest follows: pick deep, reputable pairs for liquidity, mind price impact when you trade, and keep the security checklist close.