FRB Agent vs Photon Trading Bot: Multi-Chain Comparison (2026)
**Answer first** — Photon is a web-based multi-chain sniper bot convenient for casual use, but it routes all transactions through public mempools, making large trades vulnerable to

Answer first — Photon is a web-based multi-chain sniper bot convenient for casual use, but it routes all transactions through public mempools, making large trades vulnerable to MEV attacks. FRB Agent is a local MEV infrastructure agent with Flashbots and Jito private relay integration — meaning your trades are invisible to competing bots until confirmed. For trades above $1,000, the custody and execution differences between these two tools are significant. This guide compares them head-to-head across security, strategy depth, chain support, and cost structure.
Head-to-Head Feature Comparison
| Feature | FRB Agent | Photon |
|---|---|---|
| Type | Local MEV agent | Web-based sniper |
| Interface | Desktop (Windows) | Web browser |
| Key Custody | Non-custodial (keys on your machine) | Semi-custodial |
| Private Relay | Flashbots + Jito | Public transactions |
| Chains | 7 (ETH, BSC, SOL, Base, Polygon, Arb, OP) | 3 (ETH, SOL, Base) |
| Strategy depth | Arbitrage, MEV, liquidation, snipe | Sniping, swaps |
| Simulation mode | Yes (Anvil fork, Solana gRPC simulation) | No |
| Cost model | 20% of net profitable executed trades | ~1% per trade regardless |
Security Analysis: Where the Real Difference Is
This comparison is most important for operators with meaningful capital — $1,000+ per trade. For sub-$100 casual swaps, the security differences matter less. For larger positions, they're decisive.
Photon's Security Model
Photon operates as a web application. When you use it:
- Your trades are submitted via public RPC endpoints — visible in the mempool before confirmation
- Advanced features may require importing private keys to the web interface — keys leave your machine
- Each swap is a standard public transaction — sandwich bots actively monitor mempools for large swaps and can front-run and back-run around your trade
What this means in practice: A $10,000 swap on a moderately liquid pool submitted through Photon can realistically lose $200–$500 to sandwich MEV before you receive any token. The sandwich bot sees your transaction in the mempool, buys before you to inflate the price, and sells after your transaction confirms.
FRB Agent's Security Model
FRB Agent runs entirely on your local machine:
- Private keys are stored locally, encrypted with Windows DPAPI — never transmitted to any server
- All execution happens on your machine — FRB is not a SaaS with server-side access to your keys
- Trades are submitted as private bundles through Flashbots (Ethereum) or Jito (Solana) — invisible to the public mempool until confirmed
- Installer is SHA-256-verified (FRB Labs Ltd, Companies House #15290321) and SHA-256 verified per release
What this means in practice: A $10,000 swap submitted through FRB's private relay is invisible to sandwich bots. It either lands at the price you simulated or fails with no gas cost.
For Solana specifically, FRB bundles your entry with a simultaneous stop-loss in the same Jito bundle — both execute atomically or neither executes. Photon cannot offer this because it doesn't use private relay infrastructure.
Chain Support: Where Photon Falls Short
Photon supports Ethereum, Solana, and Base. FRB Agent supports seven chains:
| Chain | FRB Agent | Photon | FRB private relay |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ethereum | Yes | Yes | Flashbots |
| Solana | Yes | Yes | Jito |
| Base | Yes | Yes | Flashbots |
| BNB Chain | Yes | No | Public + validator relay |
| Polygon | Yes | No | Flashbots |
| Arbitrum | Yes | No | Flashbots |
| Optimism | Yes | No | Flashbots |
If you operate across multiple chains — common for traders following MEV opportunities wherever they're most accessible — FRB Agent manages all seven from a single interface with a single key management setup. Photon requires separate tools for BNB, Polygon, Arbitrum, and Optimism.
Strategy Depth: Sniper vs. Full MEV Stack
Photon is purpose-built for token sniping and swaps. It monitors new Raydium and Uniswap listings and executes buys quickly. That's useful for a specific use case.
FRB Agent covers the full MEV strategy stack:
| Strategy | FRB | Photon |
|---|---|---|
| Token sniping (new launches) | Yes | Yes |
| Cross-DEX arbitrage | Yes | No |
| Lending protocol liquidations | Yes | No |
| JIT liquidity provision | Yes | No |
| Backrunning strategies | Yes | No |
| Multi-transaction bundles | Yes | No |
| Limit orders | Yes | Yes |
For traders who want to run arbitrage alongside sniping — capturing price discrepancies between Uniswap and Curve on Ethereum, or between Raydium and Orca on Solana — FRB is the only option of the two. Photon users who want arbitrage need to run a separate tool.
Cost Comparison: Which Is Actually Cheaper?
The cost model difference is significant for active traders.
| Cost item | FRB Agent | Photon |
|---|---|---|
| Download / access | Free | Free |
| Monthly subscription | None | None |
| Winning trades | 20% of net profit | ~1% per trade |
| Losing trades | $0 | ~1% per trade |
Example — 100 trades at $5,000 average size, 60% win rate:
Photon: 100 × $5,000 × 1% = $5,000 in fees regardless of outcome
FRB: Fee applies only to net profitable trades. On losing trades you pay nothing. This makes FRB substantially cheaper during periods of high failed execution rates (like volatile markets where many snipes miss).
Example — Active MEV session, many failed bundle attempts:
Flashbots bundles and Jito bundles cost nothing if they fail (you pay only when successful). A high-attempt, low-success MEV session on FRB has near-zero operational cost for failed attempts. Photon's gas-only public transactions still cost gas even when they fail.
When to Use Photon Instead
There are scenarios where Photon's simplicity is an advantage:
- Mobile access: Photon is browser-based and works on mobile. FRB Agent requires Windows.
- Occasional casual trades: For infrequent small swaps where sandwich risk is low, Photon's convenience outweighs FRB's security overhead.
- No technical setup tolerance: FRB Agent requires downloading, verifying, and configuring a desktop application. Photon requires only a browser.
The Verdict
For professional MEV operators or anyone trading meaningful capital ($1,000+ per transaction), FRB Agent's non-custodial key management and private relay infrastructure are non-negotiable advantages. Photon is a convenience tool that exposes larger trades to sandwich attacks it cannot prevent.
For casual users making small swaps on Ethereum, Solana, and Base, Photon's browser interface is more accessible.
Many professional traders use both: Photon for occasional casual access on mobile, FRB Agent for all serious execution.
FAQ
Is Photon trading bot safe? Photon is a legitimate platform. The security concern is structural — public transaction submission exposes trades to MEV, and private key import is a risk surface. For small trades, the risk is manageable. For large trades, use a private relay.
Which supports more chains? FRB Agent supports 7 chains vs. Photon's 3, with private relay on all EVM chains.
Can I use both? Yes. Some traders use Photon for mobile convenience and FRB Agent for serious MEV operations.
Related Reading
- FRB vs BonkBot Sniper 2026
- MEV Bot SaaS vs Self-Hosted 2026
- Truly Non-Custodial vs Telegram Bot 2026
- Flashbots Private RPC Guide
- Understanding Jito Bundles
Download FRB Agent — verify the installer before running, compare it yourself.
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