Monad: The EVM-Compatible Blockchain Achieving 10,000 TPS
Can an EVM-compatible blockchain actually deliver 10,000 transactions per second while keeping gas fees in the fractions of a cent? Two months after its mainnet launch, Monad is making a compelling case that it can—and the DeFi ecosystem is paying attention.
When Jump Trading veterans Keone Hon and James Hunsaker set out to build Monad in early 2023, they faced a fundamental question that has haunted Ethereum developers for years: why must the world's most developer-friendly blockchain also be one of its slowest? Their answer—a ground-up reimagining of how EVM blockchains execute transactions—has attracted $244 million in funding, a $3 billion valuation, and now $255 million in total value locked within weeks of launch.
The Problem Monad Set Out to Solve
Ethereum processes roughly 15-50 transactions per second. During periods of high demand, gas fees can spike to $50 or more for a simple token swap. This creates an uncomfortable trade-off: developers who want the largest ecosystem and best tooling must accept poor performance, while those seeking speed must abandon EVM compatibility entirely.
Solana took the latter path, building a custom virtual machine that achieves 1,000-1,500 TPS but requires developers to rewrite applications in Rust and adapt to an entirely different account model. This has led to ecosystem fragmentation—tools, libraries, and infrastructure that work on Ethereum don't work on Solana, and vice versa.
Monad's thesis is that this trade-off is unnecessary. The bottleneck isn't the EVM itself but how transactions are processed. By fundamentally rethinking execution while maintaining bytecode-level EVM compatibility, Monad achieves Solana-like performance without forcing developers to leave the Ethereum ecosystem.
Five Technical Innovations That Make 10,000 TPS Possible
Monad's performance comes from five interconnected architectural innovations, each addressing a different bottleneck in traditional blockchain design.
MonadBFT: Solving the Tail-Forking Problem
Traditional Byzantine Fault Tolerance (BFT) consensus algorithms like Tendermint require three rounds of communication before finalizing a block. MonadBFT, based on an optimized derivative of HotStuff, reduces this to two phases while achieving linear communication complexity.
More importantly, MonadBFT solves the "tail-forking problem" that plagues other BFT implementations. In standard protocols, a malicious leader can propose conflicting blocks to different validators, causing confusion and delays. MonadBFT's quadratic communication during timeout scenarios prevents this attack vector while maintaining sub-second finality under normal conditions.
The result: 400ms block times and approximately 800ms to finality—faster than blinking.
Asynchronous Execution: Decoupling Consensus from State Updates
In Ethereum, validators must execute transactions before reaching consensus. This creates a bottleneck: if transaction execution takes too long, the entire network slows down waiting for state updates.
Monad flips this model. Validators first agree on transaction ordering through MonadBFT, then execute transactions asynchronously in a separate pipeline. This means slow, complex smart contract operations can't delay block production. The network maintains consistent 400ms block times regardless of transaction complexity.
Optimistic Parallel Execution: Utilizing All CPU Cores
Here's the core insight that makes Monad's speed possible: most transactions in a block don't actually conflict with each other.
When you swap tokens on Uniswap and I transfer an NFT, our transactions touch completely different state. There's no reason they can't execute simultaneously. Traditional EVMs process them sequentially anyway, leaving most CPU cores idle.
Monad's optimistic parallel execution runs independent transactions simultaneously across all available cores. The system operates under an "optimistic" assumption that most transactions won't conflict. When they do, it detects the conflict, re-executes the affected transactions, and applies results in the original order. This preserves Ethereum's strict serial semantics while dramatically improving throughput.
MonadDB: A Database Built for Blockchain
State access is often the true bottleneck in blockchain execution. Every time a smart contract reads or writes data, it triggers database operations that can take milliseconds—an eternity when processing thousands of transactions per second.
MonadDB is a custom-built database written in C++ and Rust, optimized specifically for EVM state access patterns. It minimizes RAM pressure while maximizing SSD throughput, enabling the rapid state reads and writes that parallel execution requires.
RaptorCast: High-Speed Block Propagation
None of this matters if blocks can't propagate quickly across the network. RaptorCast is Monad's networking layer, designed to broadcast new blocks to validators rapidly without requiring servers to be colocated in the same data centers. This enables decentralization without sacrificing speed.
The Mainnet Launch: From Hype to Reality
Monad launched its mainnet on November 24, 2025, nearly three years after the team's initial seed round. The launch included a significant airdrop, distributing 15.75% of MON's 100 billion token supply to early testnet participants and liquidity providers.
The initial response was overwhelming—BERA briefly surged to $14.83 before settling around $8. More importantly for the ecosystem, major DeFi protocols deployed within days:
- Uniswap v4 leads with $28 million TVL
- Curve and Morpho brought established lending infrastructure
- Agora's AUSD stablecoin captured $144 million in deposits
- Upshift accumulated $476 million in deposits for DeFi yield strategies
By January 2026, the ecosystem reached $255 million in TVL with $397 million in stablecoins—impressive growth for a two-month-old network.
The Uniswap Dominance Problem
Here's the uncomfortable truth about Monad's early ecosystem: roughly 90% of TVL sits in established protocols that simply deployed existing code on Monad, not native applications built specifically for the network.
This isn't necessarily bad—EVM compatibility is working exactly as designed. Developers can deploy existing Ethereum smart contracts without modification. But it raises questions about whether Monad will develop a differentiated ecosystem or simply become another place to use Uniswap.
Native Monad applications are emerging, though slowly:
- Kuru: A hybrid order book-AMM DEX designed to leverage Monad's speed for market makers
- FastLane: The primary liquid staking token (LST) protocol on Monad
- Pinot Finance: An alternative DEX aiming to differentiate from Uniswap
- Neverland: Among the few Monad-native applications in the top TVL rankings
The 304 protocols listed in Monad's ecosystem directory span DeFi, AI, and prediction markets, with 78 unique to Monad. Whether these native applications can gain meaningful market share against established protocols remains the key question for 2026.
Monad vs. The Competition: Where Does It Fit?
The high-performance Layer-1 space is increasingly crowded. How does Monad compare?
| Feature | Monad | Solana | Ethereum |
|---|---|---|---|
| TPS | ~10,000 | ~1,000-1,500 | ~15-50 |
| Finality | ~0.8-1 second | ~400ms | ~12 minutes |
| EVM Compatible | Full bytecode | No | Native |
| Smart Contract Language | Solidity | Rust/C | Solidity |
| Validator Hardware | Consumer-grade | Data-center | Moderate |
| TVL (Jan 2026) | $255M | $8.5B | $60B+ |
Against Solana: Monad wins on EVM compatibility—developers don't need to rewrite applications or learn new languages. Solana wins on ecosystem maturity, deeper liquidity, and battle-tested infrastructure after years of operation (and outages). Monad's deterministic parallel execution also provides more predictability than Solana's asynchronous runtime, which has occasionally struggled with congestion.
Against Ethereum L2s: Base, Arbitrum, and Optimism offer EVM compatibility with Ethereum's security guarantees through fraud proofs or validity proofs. Monad operates as an independent L1, meaning it sacrifices Ethereum's security inheritance for potentially higher throughput. The trade-off depends on whether users prioritize maximum security or maximum speed.
Against MegaETH: Both claim 10,000+ TPS with sub-second finality. MegaETH launched in January 2026 with Vitalik Buterin's backing and targets 100,000 TPS with 10ms block times—even more aggressive than Monad. The competition between these high-performance EVM chains will likely define which approach gains market dominance.
The Jump Trading DNA
Monad's founding team background explains much about its design philosophy. Keone Hon spent eight years at Jump Trading leading high-frequency trading teams before transitioning to Jump Crypto. James Hunsaker worked alongside him, building systems that process millions of transactions per second with microsecond latency.
High-frequency trading infrastructure demands exactly what Monad delivers: predictable latency, parallel processing, and the ability to handle massive throughput without degradation. The team didn't just imagine what a high-performance blockchain should look like—they spent nearly a decade building analogous systems in traditional finance.
This background also attracted major backing: Paradigm led the $225 million Series A at a $3 billion valuation, with participation from Dragonfly Capital, Electric Capital, Greenoaks, Coinbase Ventures, and angel investors including Naval Ravikant.
What 2026 Holds for Monad
The roadmap for the coming year focuses on three areas:
Q1 2026: Staking Program Launch Validator incentives and slashing mechanisms will go live, transitioning Monad toward fuller decentralization. The current validator set remains relatively small compared to Ethereum's million-plus validators.
H1 2026: Cross-Chain Bridge Upgrades Enhanced interoperability with Ethereum and Solana through partnerships with Axelar, Hyperlane, LayerZero, and deBridge. Seamless bridging will be crucial for attracting liquidity from established ecosystems.
Ongoing: Native Application Development The Mach: Monad Accelerator and Monad Madness programs continue supporting builders creating Monad-native applications. Whether the ecosystem develops distinctive protocols or remains dominated by Uniswap and other multi-chain deployments will likely determine Monad's long-term differentiation.
The Bottom Line
Monad represents the clearest test yet of whether EVM-compatible blockchains can match purpose-built alternatives like Solana on performance. Two months post-launch, the initial evidence is promising: 10,000 TPS is achievable, major protocols have deployed, and $255 million in value has migrated to the network.
But significant questions remain. Can native applications gain traction against established multi-chain protocols? Will the ecosystem develop distinctive use cases that leverage Monad's unique capabilities? And as MegaETH and other high-performance EVM chains launch, will Monad's first-mover advantage in this specific niche matter?
For Ethereum developers frustrated by gas fees and slow confirmation times, Monad offers an intriguing proposition: keep your existing code, tools, and mental models while gaining 200x better performance. For the broader crypto ecosystem, it's a high-stakes experiment in whether technical excellence alone can build sustainable network effects.
The Jump Trading veterans behind Monad spent years building systems where milliseconds matter. Now they're applying that same obsession to blockchain—and the early results suggest they might just be onto something.
BlockEden.xyz provides enterprise-grade API infrastructure for high-performance blockchains including Ethereum, Solana, and emerging Layer-1 networks. As the blockchain landscape evolves with new high-throughput chains like Monad, reliable RPC endpoints become essential for developers building applications that demand consistent, low-latency performance. Explore our API marketplace to access the infrastructure your applications need.