You might not believe this when I tell you - VANRY was almost 'killed' by the project party yesterday
At three in the morning, the team ran an extreme stress script on the test net: letting 1000 AI agents simultaneously initiate on-chain transactions to simulate collective arbitrage in a black swan scenario.
Guess what happened?
That so-called '100,000 transactions per second' star public chain crashed directly at the 37th second. Meanwhile, on VANRY's side, the 1000 AIs didn’t fight; instead, they automatically negotiated through on-chain reasoning, managing to push the gas fee down to 0.0002 USD.
The engineer who was staring at the screen said something that I remember to this day: 'These AIs are more sensible than humans.'
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VANRY has never claimed to be the 'fastest.' It has always been doing something even more foolish: teaching AI how to 'remember' things on-chain.
Blockchain originally has no memory; once a transaction is done, it's reset. But AI is different; it needs context, needs reasoning, and needs to know what it did the previous second.
What VANRY is doing with myNeutron is writing 'memory' into the underlying layer. This isn't just putting a Tesla sticker on a tractor; it's directly disassembling the engine to replace the battery pack.
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There's another detail that even seasoned investors might not have noticed.
Last month, their collaboration with Google Cloud wasn’t just for show. They really brought in NVIDIA's A100 cluster, running the Kayon reasoning engine. You might wonder what a project that has dropped 90% is doing with this?
Is it to burn more money before running away?
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Now looking back at that moment when the 1000 AIs were collaborating. The market is still comparing who has higher TPS, who has faster blocks, but VANRY has already defaulted to a future: AI won’t wait for your confirmation, won’t look at your block height; what it needs is a track that allows it to run on its own.
A 90% drop is tragic; there’s no way to wash that away.
But you need to think clearly about one thing: when thousands of AIs need to settle simultaneously, need memory, need cross-chain coordination, can those old public chains that only know how to run scores last beyond the 37th second?
VANRY is not underestimated.
It was underestimated too early.
