Last year, a friend who works in quantitative finance talked to me about something.
He said that when they were testing the AI automatic trading system, the strategy itself was fine, the model responded quickly enough, but as soon as it went on-chain, it got stuck——
It wasn't a lack of computing power.
It was that Gas couldn't compete with people.
The AI makes dozens of decisions per second, and when market fluctuations occur, Gas prices soar.
The model is calculating, and the nodes are queuing.
The most ironic part is—— it wasn't a wrong judgment, but a slow execution.
At that moment, he realized a problem:
If the AI makes dozens of decisions per second and still has to compete for Gas, could it crash?
Most narratives of "AI + blockchain" stay at the interface level.
Just being able to call an API doesn't mean it can run continuously.
Vanar's idea is actually very simple——
Don't let toll booths block the system.
0 Gas is not free, but rather defers the costs.
It stabilizes the user experience and allows companies to budget costs.
Neutron is not just a gimmick, but allows AI to remember what happened yesterday.
The significance of Persistent Memory is——
An Agent is no longer a one-time tool, but a continuously existing executor.
Being able to remember historical decision paths,
Allows for phased trading, cross-cycle risk control, and long-term supply chain tracking.
Traditional chains are more like ledgers.
This design is more like an operational environment.
The market is cold now because everyone prefers limit up.
But infrastructure never bursts during peak heat.
They often refine their structure when no one is paying attention,
And are suddenly needed when real demand arises.
Vanar belongs to that type——
Either no one remembers it, or it is suddenly needed.
Writing code in a bear market.
Writing market value in a bull market.
#vanar $VANRY @Vanarchain