Most blockchains rely heavily on transaction fees. You use the network, you pay gas, and that’s the revenue model. It works — but it’s mostly activity-driven and short-term.
Vanar seems to be experimenting with something different through tools like myNeutron: a subscription-style model.
That changes how $VANRY fits into the ecosystem. Instead of being used only when someone moves funds, it becomes tied to ongoing access to services. If users or businesses rely on AI-powered storage, data compression, or persistent memory layers, that creates recurring demand rather than occasional spikes.
The Neutron layer isn’t positioned as simple storage either. It focuses on heavy compression and structured, AI-readable “Seeds” that can be queried later. For companies managing contracts, media, or structured datasets, that’s potentially a service worth paying for consistently.
The bigger idea is this: if utility is strong enough that people subscribe, token demand connects to usage instead of speculation alone. That’s harder to build, but potentially more sustainable.
With integrations involving Worldpay, NVIDIA, and Google Cloud, the infrastructure side appears to be forming. Now it comes down to execution — and whether users are willing to pay for on-chain AI tools long term.
That’s the real test.