GMG Engine
GMG Engine provides interpretation-only context for crypto settlement and proof-related documentation. It defines scope boundaries, evidence references, and inference limits without performing operations or issuing verdicts.
Purpose
This page offers a high-level overview of GMG Engine, clarifying how references to proofs, audits, verification, transparency, and related terms should be interpreted within defined boundaries.
The content is descriptive and informational only. It does not constitute guarantees, assurances, certifications, endorsements, compliance statements, or system-wide integrity claims.
What GMG Engine Is
GMG Engine documents a deterministic settlement surface in which recorded events may be described, normalized, ordered, and referenced as part of an append-only accounting representation.
References to replay-based verification describe an interpretive approach for discussing how outputs could be compared to provided artifacts, when such artifacts are explicitly supplied.
What GMG Engine Is Not
GMG Engine is not a physical engine, mechanical system, or industrial product, and it is unrelated to vehicles or machinery.
GMG Engine does not certify operators, providers, games, wallets, or networks, and does not provide legal, regulatory, or compliance determinations.
Proof-First, Not Trust-First
References to proof, audit, or verification describe bounded, artifact-based discussion contexts rather than global assurances or guarantees.
The presence of documentation or proof terminology does not imply that errors, manipulation, or misconduct are impossible.
Operator and Product Separation
GMG Engine is architecturally separated from operator-facing products, brands, interfaces, and user experiences.
Statements made by operators or third parties should not be interpreted as engine-level guarantees unless explicitly linked to in-scope, referenced artifacts.
Scope and Non-Goals
GMG Engine does not replace independent audits, external verification, or regulatory review. Where evidence artifacts are referenced, they should be interpreted as inputs for discussion, not as guarantees of outcomes.
How to Interpret Claims
Any claim related to fairness, fees, withdrawals, audits, or integrity should be interpreted within explicit scope boundaries. If referenced artifacts or replay steps are not provided, the claim should be treated as unverified.
For an overview of evidence references and interpretation boundaries used across this documentation, see the Master Evidence Registry.