Evidence Sources Explained | Maticslot

This page is part of Maticslot’s wallet-based crypto casino model. See Maticslot: Wallet-Based Crypto Casino.

Maticslot pages may reference different kinds of evidence-like materials (on-chain transactions, screenshots, third-party listings, or provider statements). This page explains what those sources are and what they can and cannot reference.

A working definition of “evidence”

Here, “evidence” means an observable artifact that can be referenced: a transaction hash, a page snapshot, a provider document, or a third-party listing. Evidence does not equal truth; it is an input to interpretation.

Common evidence sources

On-chain: transaction hashes, block explorer pages, token transfers, contract interactions (where applicable).

Off-chain: provider documentation, public announcements, help-center articles, screenshots, and archived pages.

Third-party signals: reputation sites, index pages, community discussions, and monitoring dashboards.

Why sources differ in meaning

Different sources answer different questions. For example, an on-chain transfer can show a movement of value, but it does not describe identity, intent, or off-chain settlement policies.

Interpretation rule

Evidence is intended to be treated as descriptive reference. When you see a source, first ask what it can directly show, then what additional assumptions would be needed to reach a stronger conclusion.

Related reading on Maticslot

Architecture Reference

See also: How Execution Works

See also: Transaction State Model

See also: Settlement Architecture Overview

See also: Wallet-Based vs Account-Based Model