Every cycle, a handful of projects stop competing on features and start competing on architecture. Hotstuff is one of them. Instead of shipping yet another perpetuals exchange, its team asked a harder question: what if a single blockchain could settle a leveraged Bitcoin trade, a tokenized Nvidia share, and a cross-border payment — from the same balance, in the same second?
That question is the whole thesis. And after digging through its docs, testnet, funding history, and the way its community actually talks about it, I think Hotstuff is one of the more quietly ambitious infrastructure plays in DeFi right now. Here’s the expert breakdown.
Hotstuff is a DeFi-native Layer 1 blockchain designed around a deceptively simple promise: “Trade. Invest. Bank.” — from one unified margin account, built for retail users outside the United States.
Open a single account, fund it once, and that same balance works across:
Most chains treat trading, custody, and payments as separate worlds bolted together with bridges and third-party apps. Hotstuff collapses them into one settlement fabric. The tagline says it best: home for all capital that actually trades and invests — open while Wall Street sleeps.
Worth noting for clarity: the name “HotStuff” also refers to a well-known 2018 academic BFT consensus protocol. This article is about Hotstuff the trading L1 (hotstuff.trade), which borrows from that lineage but is a distinct product.
Under the hood, Hotstuff runs on DracoBFT, a custom consensus mechanism built on the Fast-HotStuff family of Byzantine fault-tolerant protocols and tuned specifically for low-latency financial applications.
The headline performance numbers the project publishes:
Metric Hotstuff L1 Throughput 200,000+ TPS Block time ~75 ms Finality ~150 ms
But the more interesting design choice isn’t raw speed — it’s what the validators do. On most chains, validators just produce blocks. On Hotstuff, they also coordinate trade execution, route liquidity, provide fiat access, run compliance workflows, and handle last-mile money movement.
Co-founder and CEO Vyom Sharma describes it as “the Uber for financial validators, routing every flow to the right provider.” A trader in Asia, a remittance corridor in LATAM, and a card issuer in Europe can settle on the same rail. That reframes the chain from a passive settlement layer into active financial infrastructure — which is the part that’s genuinely hard to copy.
Hotstuff’s flagship is a high-performance, fully on-chain perpetuals venue. From one margin account you get 22+ markets with up to 50x leverage, running 24/7/365:
The pitch to traders is simple: no fragmented accounts, no legacy market hours, one balance as collateral across everything.
In a major 2026 expansion, Hotstuff launched Hotstuff Invest: 24/7 spot trading for tokenized stocks, ETFs, and crypto assets, powered by xStocks — tokens backed 1:1 by the underlying equity and redeemable for cash value.
The framing here is huge: the company is explicitly targeting the $147 trillion global equity market, with 200+ listed tokenized RWAs on the roadmap. For a user in a country with limited access to U.S. brokerages, buying tokenized Netflix, Google, or an S&P 500 ETF on a Sunday night is a genuinely new capability, not a marketing line.
Instead of letting stablecoin balances sit dead, users can deposit idle cash into vaults and earn APY. The centerpiece is the Hotstuff Liquidity Vault (HLV) — a protocol-owned, community-owned liquidity pool that acts as the primary counterparty for perpetual trading on the network.
HLV runs a hedge-mode, market-neutral strategy, sourcing yield through multi-venue execution across Hotstuff, Hyperliquid, and select CEX liquidity. The signal to watch: the initial $500K pre-deposit cap filled in ~12 hours from 988 depositors, and the team pointedly noted “no paid KOL, no paid hype — just community-led DeFi in motion.”
This is the pillar that separates Hotstuff from a pure perp DEX. It’s building neobanking infrastructure directly into the chain:
Crucially, the interface is self-custodial — you connect a non-custodial wallet, sign your own transactions, and the company never holds your funds. That’s the DeFi guarantee wrapped around a neobank experience.
Hotstuff isn’t just a consumer app. It ships a compact TypeScript SDK, real-time WebSocket streams with deterministic event payloads, sandbox environments, a public API reference, and an open GitHub org (hotstuff-labs). Desks, bots, and fintechs can integrate trading, market data, and account actions directly — a deliberate move to turn the L1 into a platform others build on.
Hotstuff didn’t appear overnight. It’s the evolution of Syndr Protocol, a derivatives project that first launched on Arbitrum Orbit and raised a ~$500K pre-seed back in January 2022. Over time the team concluded that a general-purpose rollup couldn’t deliver exchange-grade performance for order books, margining, and custody — so they rebuilt it as a standalone, purpose-built L1.
The rebrand to Hotstuff went public with a launch on December 5, 2025, alongside the opening of the public testnet. The project is run by Hotstuff Labs (based in Singapore) and is backed by a notable roster of DeFi VCs and founders, including Delphi Ventures, Dialectic, Stake Capital, 1inch, Gnosis, Socket, Biconomy, Tykhe Ventures, and CoinDCX Ventures.
What impressed me most is the shipping cadence. In roughly six months, Hotstuff went from testnet to a rapidly expanding market list:
The community narrative on X has followed the product: creators repeatedly describe it as “quietly building one of the most interesting perp-native L1s,” and the recurring theme is organic, community-led growth rather than mercenary marketing.
Let’s be direct, because it’s the first thing most readers want to know. Hotstuff has not announced a token, but the ingredients are all there: a Layer 1 that will need a native gas and staking asset, a live points program with weekly distributions, testnet Expeditions, tiers, collectible Cards, and referral rewards of up to 50%.
Because it’s an L1, a native token is widely considered highly probable — which is exactly why airdrop hunters have flagged it as an “anti-FOMO” early play. If you want to position yourself, meaningful, sustained participation is what historically matters: consistent trading volume, HLV/vault interaction, referrals, and genuine community engagement. Farming one transaction and leaving rarely ages well.
The inevitable comparison is Hyperliquid, and it’s a fair reference point — both are trading-first L1s with sub-second finality and a fully on-chain order book. The difference is scope. Hyperliquid is laser-focused on being the best perp DEX. Hotstuff is trying to be the perp DEX and the tokenized-equity broker and the neobank — a single account that spans on-chain trading and real-world fiat rails.
That broader surface area is both the bull case and the risk. If Hotstuff executes across all four pillars, it becomes something no single-purpose competitor can match. If it spreads too thin, focus becomes the challenge. So far, the shipping speed suggests they can walk and chew gum.
Hotstuff is making a big, coherent bet: that the future of finance isn’t a dozen disconnected apps, but one account where your capital can trade, invest, and bank without ever leaving the chain. The DracoBFT engine gives it the speed, the validator-as-service-provider model gives it the reach, and the Trade/Invest/Earn/Bank stack gives it a reason to exist beyond speculation.
It’s still early — testnet-stage, token-less, and unproven at full scale. But between the architecture, the backers, and a shipping cadence most teams would envy, Hotstuff has earned a spot on the watchlist of anyone serious about where on-chain finance goes next.
If you’re exploring Hotstuff yourself, start with the testnet at app.hotstuff.trade, read the docs at docs.hotstuff.trade, and follow @tradehotstuff for updates.
Disclosure: This article is for informational and educational purposes only and is not financial, investment, or legal advice. Cryptocurrency trading, leverage, and testnet participation carry significant risk. Always do your own research.
My Contacts
Dc: kresna6773
Github: https://github.com/Lesnak1
X: https://x.com/LesnaCrex
Hotstuff: The DeFi-Native Layer 1 Where You Trade, Invest, and Bank From One Account was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
