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While Ethereum struggles with fees and Solana with outages, another blockchain has been quietly working on an ambitious vision: to unite thousands of tailor-made blockchains under one roof. Avalanche (AVAX) promises speed without compromising decentralisation. The following article explores what lies behind these promises.
At a glance:
Avalanche positions itself as a Layer-1 blockchain capable of processing over 4,500 transactions per second, often at fees below one cent. The native token AVAX fuels transaction costs, enables staking rewards, and grants governance rights. In a market where Ethereum wrestles with scaling and Solana suffers downtime, Avalanche raises a provocative question. Do we really need to compromise between speed, security, and decentralisation?
| Blockchain | Transactions per Second (TPS) | Average Fees | Network Stability |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ethereum | ~15–30 TPS | $0.50 – $20 (depending on congestion) | High reliability, but slower and expensive |
| Solana | ~2,000+ TPS (theoretical 65,000) | Typically <$0.01 | Fast but prone to outages and downtime |
| Avalanche | ~4,500+ TPS | Usually <$0.01 | High speed with near-instant finality |

Avalanche’s launch in 2020 was not an ordinary token release. The project is led by Ava Labs, founded by Cornell
computer scientist Emin Gün Sirer. Funding came from heavyweights like
Andreessen Horowitz and Polychain Capital, as well as the now-defunct Three Arrows Capital.
This mix of backers raises questions: Is it a quality seal or a warning sign? The mission was ambitious from the start. Rather than just targeting DeFi and NFTs, Avalanche aimed to win over banks and governments. An academic foundation was meant to provide credibility where other blockchains leaned on hype.
The technical heart of Avalanche is unusual. Instead of Proof-of-Work or standard Proof-of-Stake, the network uses a consensus mechanism where nodes repeatedly poll random subsets of other nodes. The result is transactions that become irreversible in under two seconds, with no rollbacks or delays.
The architecture is divided into three distinct chains:
| Chain | Function |
|---|---|
| X-Chain | Handles the creation and transfer of assets such as tokens and NFTs. |
| C-Chain | EVM-compatible and home to smart contracts – the hub for DeFi activity. |
| P-Chain | Coordinates validators and manages Subnets, custom blockchains with unique rules. |
In DeFi, Avalanche attracted giants like Aave and Curve Finance, locking billions in total value at its peak. However, TVL has declined sharply since 2022. Is this a broader industry trend or a sign of fading appeal?
The NFT and gaming landscape shows mixed results. The Kalao marketplace trades NFTs, while projects like Crabada and DeFi Kingdoms run on their own Subnets. Many play-to-earn games have lost momentum, reflecting a wider GameFi downturn. Enterprise adoption offers more tangible promise.
Deloitte leverages Avalanche for its disaster relief platform “Close As You Go”, showcasing a real use case beyond speculation. Mastercard has launched an NFT artist accelerator. Yet, in many cases, it remains unclear whether partnerships represent true integrations or mere announcements.
Avalanche shines in areas where low fees matter most. DeFi protocols provide lending and yield farming, while stablecoins are issued. But how much growth is organic versus driven by incentives?
The most ambitious vision lies in Enterprise Subnets. These custom blockchains allow banks, corporates, and institutions to operate on Avalanche while complying with regulations like KYC. A bank could launch its own Subnet meeting compliance standards, while a logistics company could track supply chain data transparently. Tokenised securities could operate within regulated yet blockchain-based frameworks.
AVAX tokenomics follow a defined structure. The maximum supply is capped at 720 million tokens. AVAX is used for fees, staking (validators require 2,000 AVAX), Subnet creation, and governance. Unlike most blockchains, all transaction fees are burned rather than distributed to validators. This introduces a deflationary element supporting value – but only if network adoption remains strong. If usage declines, staking rewards (funded by new issuance) also drop. Deflation alone cannot sustain the system without genuine adoption.
Key Tokenomics Facts:
The roadmap for 2025 centres on new Subnet launches, especially in gaming and finance. KYC-enabled Subnets could position Avalanche as regulatory-compliant at a time when fully anonymous blockchains face pressure. At the same time, technical upgrades aim to improve interoperability between Subnets, pushing closer to a seamless multi-chain ecosystem.


