xMoney Rolls Out Embeddable Checkout to Domino’s Greece, Enabling Card & Wallet Payments
xMoney (XMN) has expanded its merchant payments integration with Domino’s, deploying its embeddable checkout to Domino’s Greece after an earlier rollout in Cyprus. The integration allows Domino’s Greece to accept card payments and digital wallets (Apple Pay, Google Pay) on web and mobile without redirecting users; sensitive payment data is processed on xMoney’s compliant infrastructure. The launch was announced at SuiHub Athens and highlights xMoney’s collaboration within the Sui ecosystem as part of a broader European expansion. Current implementation focuses on fiat rails, while xMoney and partners are exploring future digital-asset payment options where network speed and UX meet commerce requirements. xMoney positions XMN as a token to support ecosystem incentives and potential on-chain capabilities alongside licensed payment rails. Executives quoted include Daufood CTO Manos Tsouloufris and xMoney CEO Gregorious Siourounis. XMN is listed on exchanges such as Kraken, KuCoin, MEXC, Bitvavo and Bluefin.
Bullish
This partnership and product rollout are likely bullish for XMN because they increase real-world utility and merchant adoption — key drivers for token demand over time. The embeddable checkout reduces friction for payments (cards and wallets) and positions xMoney as a payments infrastructure provider within the Sui ecosystem and European retail market. Short-term price impact may be modest: merchant integrations often translate to gradual adoption rather than immediate speculative spikes. However, the announcement improves narrative and fundamental value — signaling scalable B2B revenue potential and potential future on-chain use cases — which can support medium- to long-term upward pressure on XMN if adoption grows and liquidity remains available on listed exchanges. Risks that temper the bullish outlook include continued reliance on fiat rails (limiting immediate on-chain utility), execution risk in broader rollouts, and typical market volatility.