The growth of blockchain space makes interoperability a crucial requirement for decentralized apps to perform efficiently. This omnichain network aims to deliver.
Presented by Dojima Network
Dojima Network enables EVM and non-EVM cross-chain interactions while providing a playground for developers, ushering in a new era of blockchain efficiency and simplicity.
The blockchain ecosystem has grown into a trillion-dollar industry with the rise of cryptocurrencies. As the blockchain space expanded and evolved, the smart contract functionality gave birth to thousands of DApps, which are decentralized Web3 applications made possible by blockchain.
The multitude of blockchain networks and DApps, along with core promises of blockchain such as decentralization, raises a fundamental question: How can blockchains be rendered to communicate and work together?
Blockchain interoperability with omnichain approach
Since blockchains are not inherently interoperable, the fragmented ecosystem swarms with diverse layer-1 and layer-2 networks. Achieving seamless integration between blockchain requires taking an omnichain approach for developers. However, the number of standardized marketplaces and tools for building cross-chain protocols and faster DApps is limited.
Dojima Network offers an omnichain platform that serves as a universal layer and unifies blockchains regardless of their compatibility with EVM — Ethereum’s smart contract executer Ethereum Virtual Machine. The platform includes a marketplace that supplies developers with a wide range of powerful tools.
By reducing the technical barriers to cross-chain building and eliminating the need to create from scratch, Dojima — a Cointelegraph Accelerator participant — empowers developers with the ability to build complete applications from templates in just a few minutes.
After 15 months of testnet launch and 100,000 hours of development, Dojima recently launched its stagenet — the alpha version of its mainnet. During this phase, Dojima Network will onboard partner blockchains to allow them to test stagenet functionalities before eventually deploying them on the mainnet. The stagenet processed more than one hundred transactions within the first 24 hours.