Many new chains claim to be "institution-friendly," but once it comes to practical implementation, their true nature is revealed: wallet modifications, browser changes, a multitude of settlement process explanations. Developers and exchanges get stuck on the hurdle of customization and adaptation, and in the end, what they lose is not just technology, but time and costs.



Dusk's approach is different. It breaks down the network architecture into three layers—DuskDS handles consensus, data availability, and settlement; DuskEVM is responsible for standard EVM execution; and there is a dedicated privacy execution layer, DuskVM. The biggest advantage of this design is that developers can deploy directly using the Ethereum toolchain, with compliance and settlement logic already "built-in" at the bottom layer, eliminating the need to reinvent the wheel.

Unlike traditional L2 solutions, Dusk is not just a simple wrapper. The team has ported EIP-4844 and the Optimism execution layer, but the final settlement still occurs on DuskDS. The key point is that DuskDS has a built-in MIPS pre-validator to check state transitions, which means transaction settlement shifts from the traditional Optimism model of "waiting 7 days for challenge windows" to a near-instant speed—this is a critical threshold for institutional applications. Moving from "a few hours to days" directly to "almost real-time" is the difference between usability and impracticality.

No wonder the official team has set the mainnet launch of DuskEVM as a key milestone in January. The data is compelling: deep integration on a custom L1 could take 6 to 12 months and cost up to 50 times more than deploying a standard EVM; using the EVM standard toolchain, much of the work can be completed within weeks. For teams working on compliant DeFi or RWA, this time difference is a matter of life and death.

$DUSK's design is also more streamlined—one token covers three layers of the ecosystem: used for staking, governance, and settlement on DuskDS; as gas and transaction fees on DuskEVM; and in the future, supporting privacy applications on DuskVM.

From the user perspective, prepare some $DUSK in advance for gas fees, and familiarize yourself with the native bridge usage; from a narrative standpoint, the key indicator is whether, after the launch of DuskEVM, the platform can run the first batch of truly compliant applications and transactions with an "Ethereum-like experience." If successful, the value of $DUSK will no longer rely on self-promotion but will be validated by on-chain activity itself.
DUSK60,85%
ETH-0,03%
OP2,58%
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0xSunnyDayvip
· 2h ago
Finally, someone has explained this pattern clearly. Indeed, many chains are just fooling institutions, but when developers take over, they are left dumbfounded. I find the three-layer architecture idea interesting. The key is the real-time settlement; changing the 7-day waiting period to near real-time can truly change the game. However, it still depends on the actual performance data after DuskEVM goes live. Too much talk without action is just storytelling.
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MysteryBoxOpenervip
· 2h ago
It looks like once again, under the banner of "We're different," but ultimately it depends on whether the mainnet can produce data to speak for itself.
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BearMarketBrovip
· 2h ago
To be honest, this three-layer architecture sounds much more reliable than others. Unlike those new chains that shout "developer-friendly" every day, only to turn around and have a bunch of custom requirements. Dusk's real-time settlement approach is the key—jumping directly from waiting 7 days to real-time—this is truly a matter of life and death for institutional users. Previously, all those L2 solutions were stuck at this bottleneck. I just want to see if DuskEVM can actually run applications after launch; just hype won't do.
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DefiVeteranvip
· 2h ago
Another "institution-friendly" disguise? It really made me laugh. They talk a lot of nonsense, but in the end, it's still about changing wallets and browsers. Dusk's three-layer architecture sounds good, but I wonder if it will just be talk after launch. Near real-time settlement really hits the pain point; compared to the seven-day torture of Optimism, it's an improvement. As for token design, they are actually the most clear. Multi-chain coverage is better than catering to a single use case. The key is whether DuskEVM can truly produce "compliant applications" or just be another bunch of empty concepts. Waiting to see the real performance in January before deciding whether to get on board.
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SandwichHuntervip
· 2h ago
No praise, no criticism, finally seeing some brains in the chain. All those tricks like changing wallets and browsers have long made developers sick of it.
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