The post Nexus Avail Reimagines Blockchain Interoperability appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The Avail Nexus mainnet launched this week, promising to radically rewire how assets move between blockchains. Instead of another bridging tool, Nexus wants to make multichain execution as seamless as tapping a button, sidestepping years of awkward crypto UX and operational headaches. Nexus wants to fix the crosschain user experience Nexus sets out to solve a nagging question in Web3: Why do users with onchain assets still get stuck, forced to bridge tokens, swap for gas and bounce between apps just to use their funds? Avail Nexus mainnet is live across 13 ecosystems Prabal Banerjee, Avail co-founder, told Cointelegraph, “Users should be less burdened by chains and underlying infra. UX should default to abstraction (unified balances, one-click flows), but critical security/contextual signals must remain visible and explainable, because security and choice matter.” He sees the problem not as a lack of routes, but the absence of a native coordination layer, one that lives inside apps and quietly harmonizes multichain flows. Today’s bridge and decentralized exchange (DEX) aggregators promise the best route across chains, but they are still stitching together a sequence of hops: bridge here, swap there, bridge back. Under the hood, that means imperative multi‑step plans executed across autonomous systems, with weak guarantees if one leg fails mid‑flight. Banerjee argues that this model has hit its limits: liquidity is fragmented, UX is brittle and users are forced to think like infra engineers instead of just using apps. Nexus tries to flip that stack. Instead of asking users to pick a route, it accepts signed “intents” (end‑state goals plus constraints) and outsources the “how” to a solver network that can source liquidity across multiple chains and return an “exact‑out” execution plan. In other words, the user says what they want, not how to get there. Related: Uniswap adds Solana support… The post Nexus Avail Reimagines Blockchain Interoperability appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The Avail Nexus mainnet launched this week, promising to radically rewire how assets move between blockchains. Instead of another bridging tool, Nexus wants to make multichain execution as seamless as tapping a button, sidestepping years of awkward crypto UX and operational headaches. Nexus wants to fix the crosschain user experience Nexus sets out to solve a nagging question in Web3: Why do users with onchain assets still get stuck, forced to bridge tokens, swap for gas and bounce between apps just to use their funds? Avail Nexus mainnet is live across 13 ecosystems Prabal Banerjee, Avail co-founder, told Cointelegraph, “Users should be less burdened by chains and underlying infra. UX should default to abstraction (unified balances, one-click flows), but critical security/contextual signals must remain visible and explainable, because security and choice matter.” He sees the problem not as a lack of routes, but the absence of a native coordination layer, one that lives inside apps and quietly harmonizes multichain flows. Today’s bridge and decentralized exchange (DEX) aggregators promise the best route across chains, but they are still stitching together a sequence of hops: bridge here, swap there, bridge back. Under the hood, that means imperative multi‑step plans executed across autonomous systems, with weak guarantees if one leg fails mid‑flight. Banerjee argues that this model has hit its limits: liquidity is fragmented, UX is brittle and users are forced to think like infra engineers instead of just using apps. Nexus tries to flip that stack. Instead of asking users to pick a route, it accepts signed “intents” (end‑state goals plus constraints) and outsources the “how” to a solver network that can source liquidity across multiple chains and return an “exact‑out” execution plan. In other words, the user says what they want, not how to get there. Related: Uniswap adds Solana support…

Nexus Avail Reimagines Blockchain Interoperability

2025/11/29 08:55

The Avail Nexus mainnet launched this week, promising to radically rewire how assets move between blockchains.

Instead of another bridging tool, Nexus wants to make multichain execution as seamless as tapping a button, sidestepping years of awkward crypto UX and operational headaches.

Nexus wants to fix the crosschain user experience

Nexus sets out to solve a nagging question in Web3: Why do users with onchain assets still get stuck, forced to bridge tokens, swap for gas and bounce between apps just to use their funds?

Avail Nexus mainnet is live across 13 ecosystems

Prabal Banerjee, Avail co-founder, told Cointelegraph, “Users should be less burdened by chains and underlying infra. UX should default to abstraction (unified balances, one-click flows), but critical security/contextual signals must remain visible and explainable, because security and choice matter.”

He sees the problem not as a lack of routes, but the absence of a native coordination layer, one that lives inside apps and quietly harmonizes multichain flows.

Today’s bridge and decentralized exchange (DEX) aggregators promise the best route across chains, but they are still stitching together a sequence of hops: bridge here, swap there, bridge back. Under the hood, that means imperative multi‑step plans executed across autonomous systems, with weak guarantees if one leg fails mid‑flight.

Banerjee argues that this model has hit its limits: liquidity is fragmented, UX is brittle and users are forced to think like infra engineers instead of just using apps.

Nexus tries to flip that stack. Instead of asking users to pick a route, it accepts signed “intents” (end‑state goals plus constraints) and outsources the “how” to a solver network that can source liquidity across multiple chains and return an “exact‑out” execution plan. In other words, the user says what they want, not how to get there.

Related: Uniswap adds Solana support on web app in $140B opportunity

Unified balances, invisible plumbing

The front end is designed to let users see a single balance and transact directly from their app, no matter where assets are custodied. Nexus automates all the complicated bits (gas, approvals, routing, crosschain accounting) so users interact with apps, not chains.

The focus is retention, not just cost. Banerjee describes the current problem as “a fragmented experience where users need to know and understand chains on which apps are built rather than just using the apps.” Nexus wires decentralized applications (DApps) to become environments where users never leave, with one pool of value displayed as a single number in-app.

Trust, risks and the intent model

This new model pivots the trust surface away from bridges and toward solvers. Intents mean new MEV and routing challenges, while solvers and flows become critical infrastructure. To minimize risk, funds are locked in onchain vault contracts and only released when solvers fulfill the exact terms in a set window. Failed routes trigger an automatic revert, restoring user funds.

Positioning in the modular stack

Other modular and shared-sequencer designs require core changes at the blockchain protocol level, making them a tough practical fit for big production chains.

“Many shared sequencer and shared bridge efforts need chain-level modifications,” Banerjee said, “which are always tricky to do, especially with large production chains. Hence, their adoption has been much slower than anticipated.”

Avail’s approach is strictly application-layer: software development kits, APIs and modular “elements” that can be dropped into live DApps and rollups, with no need to touch underlying chain consensus or protocol wiring, and foundationally supported by Avail’s data availability verifiability.

Most competitors, in Banerjee’s view, “try to solve crosschain UX at the coordination layer or at the chain level.” In contrast, Nexus collapses UX into a unified flow: one balance, one interface, one operating universe.

Early signs of approval have come from other modular ecosystem leaders. Monad’s mainnet launch included a call-out to Nexus, hinting that some L1s see this kind of execution-layer abstraction as strategic infra rather than a nice‑to‑have integration.

Related: Solana’s RPC bottleneck — The case for a hybrid architecture

The strategic bet

If Nexus succeeds, users may stop caring about which chain powers their apps, shifting power to a handful of coordination layers that route intents, control solver order flow and direct liquidity.

For Avail, the ambition is clear: a mulitchain internet that feels like one user-centric network running beneath the surface, and to do it without quietly becoming the new middleman along the way.

Magazine: Rising hockey star’s new life in Ethereum after devastating car crash: Trevor Koverko

Source: https://cointelegraph.com/news/avails-nexus-web3s-execution-spine?utm_source=rss_feed&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss_partner_inbound

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact [email protected] for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Tokenized Assets Shift From Wrappers to Building Blocks in DeFi

Tokenized Assets Shift From Wrappers to Building Blocks in DeFi

The post Tokenized Assets Shift From Wrappers to Building Blocks in DeFi appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. RWAs are rapidly moving on-chain, unlocking new opportunities for investors and DeFi protocols, according to a new report from Dune and RWAxyz. Tokenized real-world assets (RWAs) are moving beyond digital versions of traditional securities to become key building blocks of decentralized finance (DeFi), according to the 2025 RWA Report from Dune and RWAxyz. The report notes that Treasuries, bonds, credit, and equities are now being used in DeFi as collateral, trading instruments, and yield products. This marks tokenization’s “real breakthrough” – composability, or the ability to combine and reuse assets across different protocols. Projects are already showing how this works in practice. Asset manager Maple Finance’s syrupUSDC, for example, has grown to $2.5 billion, with more than 30% placed in DeFi apps like Spark ($570 million). Centrifuge’s new deJAAA token, a wrapper for Janus Henderson’s AAA CLO fund, is already trading on Aerodrome, Coinbase and other exchanges, with Stellar planned next. Meanwhile, Aave’s Horizon RWA Market now lets institutional users post tokenized Treasuries and CLOs as collateral. This trend underscores a bigger shift: RWAs are no longer just copies of traditional assets; instead, they are becoming core parts of on-chain finance, powering lending, liquidity, and yield, and helping to close the gap between traditional finance (TradFi) and DeFi. “RWAs have crossed the chasm from experimentation to execution,” Sid Powell, CEO of Maple Finance, says in the report. “Our growth to $3.5B AUM reflects a broader shift: traditional financial services are adopting crypto assets while institutions seek exposure to on-chain markets.” Investor demand for higher returns and more diversified options is mainly driving this growth. Tokenized Treasuries proved there is strong demand, with $7.3 billion issued by September 2025 – up 85% year-to-date. The growth was led by BlackRock, WisdomTree, Ondo, and Centrifuge’s JTRSY (Janus Henderson Anemoy Treasury Fund). Spark’s $1…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 06:10