Electroneum has been around long enough to have a history, which puts it in a different category from most projects generating attention in crypto right now. It launched in 2017, raised funds from roughly 120,000 participants in what was one of the largest ICOs by participant count at the time, and spent several years building out mobile mining functionality before the team made a decision that changed the project’s trajectory entirely: they rebuilt the underlying blockchain from scratch.
The result is Electroneum Smartchain, an EVM-compatible Layer 1 blockchain that went live in 2025 after a testnet phase the previous year. Understanding why it’s drawing attention requires understanding both what the technology actually does and where it fits in the broader Layer 1 landscape, which is considerably more crowded than it was when Electroneum first launched.
The Architecture: What ETN-SC Actually Is
Electroneum Smartchain is EVM-compatible, which is the single most consequential technical decision the team made. EVM compatibility means the chain runs the Ethereum Virtual Machine, supporting Solidity smart contracts and the full suite of Ethereum development tooling. For developers, this means code written for Ethereum can be deployed on ETN-SC with minimal modification. For the ecosystem, it means the enormous existing base of Ethereum-compatible tools, wallets, and infrastructure can work with Electroneum Smartchain from day one rather than requiring everything to be built from scratch.
The consensus mechanism is IBFT, Istanbul Byzantine Fault Tolerance, which produces 5-second single-block finality. This is meaningfully different from probabilistic finality, where a transaction becomes more secure with each additional block but is technically reversible until enough blocks have accumulated. Single-block finality means a transaction is final when it’s included in a block, period. For payment applications, point-of-sale use cases, and any context where the receiving party needs certainty quickly, this distinction matters.
The validators running the network are not anonymous miners competing for block rewards. They are a curated set of NGOs and academic institutions that Electroneum has partnered with since transitioning away from proof-of-work in 2021. This Proof of Responsibility model, as the project calls it, keeps energy consumption dramatically lower than mining-based chains while maintaining the decentralisation that comes from having geographically and institutionally diverse validators.
Transaction fees are a fraction of a cent. The specific figure varies with network conditions but sits around $0.001 per transaction under normal circumstances. For the use cases Electroneum is targeting, particularly micropayments and financial services for users in emerging economies, this fee level is practically irrelevant rather than a cost to manage around.
Where Electroneum Smartchain Sits in the Layer 1 Field
The Layer 1 blockchain space in 2026 is not short of options. Ethereum, Solana, Avalanche, BNB Chain, Sui, Aptos, and several others all compete for developer attention and user adoption. Making a case for a new entrant in this environment requires being specific about what it does differently and for whom.
Electroneum’s differentiation is built around three things: transaction cost, validator model, and the existing user base inherited from the legacy chain.
On cost, even in a field where “low fees” is a near-universal claim, ETN-SC’s fee structure is competitive. Sub-cent fees that are reliably that low regardless of network congestion are meaningful for applications where transaction cost is a barrier to use rather than just an inconvenience.
The validator model is genuinely unusual. Most blockchains use some form of token-weighted validator selection, where the largest token holders have the most influence over consensus. ETN-SC’s institutional validator approach produces a different trust model, one that may appeal to enterprises or NGOs considering blockchain integration who have reservations about the governance implications of token-weighted consensus.
The inherited user base is the underappreciated advantage. Electroneum has over 5 million registered users who have interacted with the project in some form since 2017. That’s not a figure most new blockchain projects can start from.
Transaction Volume and Network Activity
The activity numbers for ETN-SC in 2025 attracted attention from people tracking blockchain analytics, and they’re worth being specific about rather than gesturing at vaguely.
The network processed 200,000 to 350,000 transactions daily in May 2025, with the activity coming from a mix of sources: AnyTask payments, peer-to-peer transfers, smart contract interactions, and exchange activity. The figure that circulated widely in crypto commentary was the comparison to Avalanche-level transaction counts, achieved while using a fraction of the network’s total capacity.
Whether that comparison holds significance depends on what you think daily transaction counts measure. High transaction volumes on a chain with low fees can reflect genuine utility or can reflect wash activity, spam, or incentivised behaviour that inflates the numbers. The composition of ETN-SC’s transaction volume, with meaningful contributions from AnyTask payments and peer-to-peer transfers, suggests at least a portion of it reflects actual use rather than purely speculative activity.
The network’s transaction capacity relative to its current load is relevant for the same reason it is for any infrastructure: headroom. A chain running at 1.2% utilisation has considerable room to absorb growth before congestion becomes a performance issue.
Developer Access and the thirdweb Integration
One of the more significant developments for ETN-SC’s developer ecosystem was the thirdweb integration in October 2025. thirdweb exposed the network to its 70,000+ developers through easy-to-use tools for smart contracts, wallets, and dApps.
For context: thirdweb is a developer platform that abstracts away much of the complexity of blockchain development, allowing teams to deploy smart contracts, build wallets, and create applications without needing deep blockchain expertise. Integration with a platform of that scale materially changes the practical accessibility of building on ETN-SC. Developers who are already familiar with thirdweb’s tooling can deploy on Electroneum Smartchain without learning a new development environment.
The hackathon Electroneum ran in early 2025 attracted over 1,300 participants, producing applications including a DEX, and generated measurable increases in on-chain smart contract activity. Whether the developer community continues to grow and produce durable applications is the long-term question that hackathon results can’t fully answer, but the early signal was more substantive than a participation metric.
RPC infrastructure has expanded alongside developer interest. ANKR became ETN’s first major RPC partner in June 2024, followed by thirdweb’s RPC endpoint, and GetBlock added support in February 2026. Multiple RPC providers improve reliability and reduce single-point-of-failure risk for applications building on the chain, which is infrastructure maturity rather than a flashy development but matters for production deployments.
AnyTask and the Real-World Utility Question
The question that follows any blockchain project is whether the chain has applications that create genuine demand for the underlying token and network, or whether the activity is primarily speculative.
Electroneum’s answer to this question is AnyTask, a freelance platform that has been running since 2020 and integrated direct ETN payments in late 2024. The platform targets users in emerging economies who lack access to traditional payment systems, creating a use case where the cryptocurrency’s low fees and mobile accessibility address real friction that exists in the market. AnyTask charges no commission, which positions it differently from mainstream freelance platforms and gives it a genuine reason for users to choose it over alternatives.
The platform has been covered by mainstream media including CNBC and BBC, which is more external validation than most crypto-adjacent applications achieve. Whether it reaches the scale needed to be a significant driver of ETN network activity is still playing out.
What to Watch
Electroneum Smartchain is at the stage where the foundational infrastructure is in place and the question is adoption. The EVM compatibility, the fee structure, the validator model, the existing user base, and the developer tooling are all arguments in its favour. The Layer 1 landscape is competitive enough that technical merit alone doesn’t determine which chains achieve lasting adoption.
The expansion of the validator network, the development of the dApp ecosystem beyond initial hackathon projects, and the trajectory of AnyTask usage are the indicators worth following if you’re trying to assess whether ETN-SC’s current activity represents a sustainable base or a launch spike.
The project has survived from 2017 to 2026 and made a significant technical pivot in that time, which is not a small thing in an industry where most projects don’t. Whether the Smartchain iteration achieves what the previous iterations didn’t is the question the next few years will answer.






