By Tyler Warner
6 min read
Morning Minute is a daily newsletter written by Tyler Warner. The analysis and opinions expressed are his own and do not necessarily reflect those of Decrypt. Subscribe to the Morning Minute on Substack.
GM!
Today’s top news:
The most important blockchain tech of the decade may have just arrived.
And the biggest players in finance are taking note.
Yesterday, LayerZero Labs unveiled Zero, a new L1 blockchain targeting 2 million transactions per second (TPS) per Zone.
For perspective, that TPS target is roughly 100,000x Ethereum and 500x Solana.
It launches fall 2026 with three initial zones: a general-purpose EVM environment, a privacy-focused payments system, and a purpose-built trading venue.
And it’s got some serious backing and partners lined up:
But it’s the architecture that makes Zero different from the last dozen “institutional blockchain” projects.
Every blockchain today is homogeneous, which means every validator downloads, processes, and verifies every transaction. It’s like running a company where every employee does every job.
Zero uses ZK proofs to break that model. Block Producers handle the heavy lifting: executing transactions, building blocks, and generating proofs. Block Validators just verify the proofs, making it cheap enough to run on consumer hardware.
That split is what makes it heterogeneous, and it’s the foundation for running multiple “Atomicity Zones” in parallel, like concurrent processes on a multi-core CPU.
“Zero’s architecture moves the industry’s roadmap forward by at least a decade,” said LayerZero CEO Bryan Pellegrino. “We believe we can actually bring the entire global economy onchain with this technology.”
“This is a historic opportunity at the intersection of finance and the internet,” said Cathie Wood.
Google Cloud’s Head of Web3 Strategy Richard Widmann: “As AI agents start to become economic actors, the programmability of cryptocurrencies and blockchains will require infrastructure as reliable as the cloud itself.”
If Zero’s architecture works as described, it’s attacking a real problem in blockchains: redundant replication.
Ethereum forces every validator to do the same work, which is secure and decentralized… but very inefficient.
Solana improves throughput by raising hardware requirements, which works… but pushes the network toward fewer operators (less decentralized).
Zero is basically saying: stop choosing decentralization or security.
Make verification cheap enough that home validators can still exist at scale, and push execution into a producer class that competes to generate proofs. Then run multiple “cores” (Zones) in parallel so the chain isn’t a single global traffic jam.
Of course, this whole pitch lives or dies on implementation details:
But the vision and direction make sense. And clearly some of the biggest players in the world recognize it.
Now let’s see if Bryan and team can pull it off…
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