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The creator application is a quality gate, not a gatekeeper. BlockForecast reviews every application to make sure the platform stays free of ambiguous, low-effort, or unresolvable markets — but the bar is reasonable. If you have a specific topic area, can write clear binary questions, and have a plan to bring traders to your markets, you’ll get approved. The review typically takes under 24 hours, and you’ll hear back via X DM on the handle you provide. You can also check status at any time by visiting /create — your wallet’s current state (pending, approved, rejected, or suspended) is shown there.
Creator access is required before you can publish any market on BlockForecast. You cannot reach the market creation form at /create without approved creator status.

What BlockForecast looks for

Approvals are based on four things:
  1. Question quality. Your example markets should be specific, time-bounded, and answerable from a public source. “Will Arsenal beat Chelsea on 5 May?” is good. “Will Arsenal do well this season?” is not.
  2. Resolvability. Every market needs an authoritative source the AI oracle can read at resolution time — a sports API, CoinGecko, Pyth, AP News, an official election body. If the answer lives only in a private or ambiguous place, the market won’t pass.
  3. No insider information. Markets must be questions any member of the public could answer from publicly available sources at resolution time. Markets that give an unfair edge to someone with insider access are rejected.
  4. Distribution intent. A creator who actively promotes their markets generates more volume. You don’t need a huge audience, but having some plan — a newsletter, a Discord, a Farcaster community, a Twitter following — helps both your approval odds and your earnings.

The application form

The form at blockforecast.io/apply asks for five things:
  • Display name and X handle — Discord and Farcaster are optional but helpful.
  • Topic areas — pick up to five categories you’d create markets in (e.g., “Premier League, La Liga, MLS football”).
  • Two example markets — full question text, time-bounded, written exactly as you’d publish them.
  • Distribution plan — how you’ll bring traders to your markets: audience size, platforms, community.
  • Short paragraph — 50–600 characters on why you want to create on BlockForecast.
The example markets field carries the most weight in the review. Write them exactly as you’d publish them — full question text, specific resolution date. Vague examples result in slower reviews and lower approval odds.

How to apply, step by step

1

Sign in with your wallet

Go to blockforecast.io/apply and sign in with the wallet you intend to use for creating markets. BlockForecast uses Privy — you can sign in with Google, Apple, email, or an existing Web3 wallet. Use the wallet you want your creator fees paid to.
2

Fill in your profile details

Enter your display name and X handle. Add Discord or Farcaster handles if you have them — creators with a Farcaster presence often see higher approval rates due to the platform’s overlap with the Base ecosystem.
3

Choose your topic areas

Select up to five categories. Be specific: “Premier League and La Liga football” is more credible than “sports.” The team looks for applicants with genuine expertise in their chosen domains.
4

Write two example markets

Write two markets you’d actually launch in week one. Use the format: “Will [subject] [verb] by [specific date/time]?” Include a resolution date and make sure the answer would be available from a public source. Treat this like a live submission.
5

Describe your distribution plan

Explain where your traders will come from. This doesn’t need to be large — a 500-person Discord or a niche Farcaster channel counts. The team wants to see that you’ve thought about bringing volume to your markets.
6

Submit and wait for review

Submit the form. The applicant page will switch to “Application received.” Reviews typically complete in under 24 hours — often faster during business hours. You’ll be DM’d on X when there’s a decision; you can also check status at /create any time. If you haven’t heard back after 48 hours, email support@blockforecast.io.

What happens after you submit

Once your application is under review, the team checks your example markets against the resolvability and quality criteria. Most decisions land in under 24 hours and are delivered via X DM on the handle you provided. If approved: your wallet is upgraded to creator status immediately. You can access /create right away and launch your first market — the wizard rehydrates any draft you started before applying, so you pick up where you left off. If not approved: the X DM explains which criteria weren’t met and whether you can reapply. Common reasons for rejection are ambiguous example markets or no clear distribution plan — both of which are fixable with a revised submission. The form pre-fills with your previous answers when you reapply.

What to do while you wait

  • Browse active markets on the platform to get a feel for question style and resolution criteria.
  • Study the create-a-market guide so you’re ready to launch immediately after approval.
  • Draft your first 5–10 markets in a text file. Having a queue of questions ready means you can launch your portfolio on day one.
No. Creator access is tied to the wallet you sign in with at application time. If you want to create markets from a different wallet, you’ll need to submit a new application with that wallet.
No. The application is free. Creating a market via the website is free for approved creators (gas only, cents on Base). Creating via the x402 Agent API costs $1 USDC per market — paid by the agent wallet, non-refundable on unapproved wallets.
Yes. Address the specific feedback in the rejection email and resubmit. Most applicants who reapply with stronger example markets and a clearer distribution plan are approved on the second attempt.
You’ll get an X DM on the handle you submitted. You can also check status any time by visiting /create — the page shows your wallet’s current state (pending, approved, rejected, or suspended) and the next action.