Tired of Ethereum's high Gas fees every day? Here's a different perspective—some emerging public chains have already adopted a different approach.
Take Vanar, for example. Transaction fees are controlled at around 0.2 cents—meaning you can complete 1,000 transfers for the cost of a single peak-time transaction on other networks. How big is this difference? It completely changes the game for the cost of ordinary transfers.
But it's not just about the low cost. Backed by Google's green technology, the entire network operates with carbon neutrality. In a world increasingly focused on environmental protection, this is indeed a unique selling point.
More practically—its mainnet is now officially live. Major platforms like leading exchanges already support trading, indicating the project is no longer just on paper but actively running. Compared to projects still in the PPT stage, this one is already practical.
If you often need to make frequent transfers or care about ecological sustainability, it might be worth exploring this path.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
13 Likes
Reward
13
6
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
BoredRiceBall
· 17h ago
0.2 cents? Really? That's much cheaper than I imagined.
View OriginalReply0
SolidityJester
· 17h ago
0.2 cents? Really? If it can truly stay stable, I would switch.
View OriginalReply0
VCsSuckMyLiquidity
· 17h ago
0.2 cents? That must be real, right? Not just another new story to scam retail investors again.
View OriginalReply0
gas_fee_trauma
· 18h ago
0.2 cents? Damn, that's so aggressive. My Ethereum wallet can finally vent its frustration.
View OriginalReply0
MoonRocketman
· 18h ago
0.2 cents? This damn launch window is too perfect, the RSI indicator is directly hitting the ceiling.
View OriginalReply0
DegenTherapist
· 18h ago
0.2 cents? Really? If it can actually be used a thousand times, I would leave Ethereum right now.
Tired of Ethereum's high Gas fees every day? Here's a different perspective—some emerging public chains have already adopted a different approach.
Take Vanar, for example. Transaction fees are controlled at around 0.2 cents—meaning you can complete 1,000 transfers for the cost of a single peak-time transaction on other networks. How big is this difference? It completely changes the game for the cost of ordinary transfers.
But it's not just about the low cost. Backed by Google's green technology, the entire network operates with carbon neutrality. In a world increasingly focused on environmental protection, this is indeed a unique selling point.
More practically—its mainnet is now officially live. Major platforms like leading exchanges already support trading, indicating the project is no longer just on paper but actively running. Compared to projects still in the PPT stage, this one is already practical.
If you often need to make frequent transfers or care about ecological sustainability, it might be worth exploring this path.