
Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana dominate three distinct on-chain activity types, and most active crypto users interact with them at some point. Bitcoin is still the heavyweight for settlement and long-term holding. Ethereum powers the biggest share of DeFi. Solana is the go-to choice for fast transaction speeds at the lowest fees.
The weird part is that the more “multi-chain” crypto becomes, the less multi-chain it feels in practice. Moving capital across ecosystems still involves bridges, wrapped assets, extra approvals, and extra trust assumptions. If you’ve ever tried to shift funds quickly to grab a trade, chase a yield opportunity, or just rebalance without a headache, you know the pain: fragmented liquidity turns simple actions into multi-step workflows.
That’s the problem LiquidChain is trying to address.
Rather than launching a new Layer-1 that would require user migration, LiquidChain positions itself as a Layer-3 network designed to coordinate execution and liquidity across Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana from its unique layer. The goal is to stop treating each chain as a separate universe and finally make cross-chain activity feel more like a single transaction flow, the team says.
Liquidity fragmentation doesn’t always get the most hype, but it does tax every part of the process:
Developers feel it as operational overhead. Supporting multiple ecosystems often means multiple integrations and deployments, plus extra work to keep liquidity and UX from breaking apart across chains.
These are all problems that require significant extra work and funding, yet they are often expensive and inefficient. Given that multi-chain use is likely to continue growing, LiquidChain’s narrative is to provide infrastructure that reduces friction while providing deeper liquidity.
LiquidChain operates on top of existing blockchains rather than competing with them. Its goal is to coordinate the activity rather than replace the base, says the team. It offers a unique approach to a problem every crypto trader faces daily, which is what gives it its value.
The project highlights three core elements:
1) Fast execution using the Solana Virtual Machine (SVM).
LiquidChain uses the power of SVM to execute trades, aiming for high throughput and parallel processing rather than serial bottlenecks.
2) Cross-chain communication through established tooling.
The project integrates with established messaging frameworks such as LayerZero, Axelar, and Wormhole, leveraging widely used tooling across the multi-chain ecosystem.
3) A verification layer for cross-chain actions.
It will also feature a tracking mechanism called “Proof of Execution,” which records and verifies cross-chain actions. All transactions are processed through its system without conflicting consensus rules of Bitcoin, Ethereum, or Solana.
That way, all applications can reference and coordinate liquidity across the three biggest chains without forcing users to manually hop chains for every move.
If LiquidChain manages to launch its unique Layer 3 solution, the benefits will be mechanical.
Users will have fewer steps and less manual bridging. Instead of juggling wrapped assets and network switching, LiquidChain will handle coordination behind the scenes.
Developers, on the other hand, will be able to build once and access liquidity across the major blockchains seamlessly. That could reduce the need for multiple deployments and isolated liquidity pools, allowing them to spend more time on perfecting their dApps and blockchain projects.
In short, LiquidChain is aiming for:
LiquidChain is running a public presale for its native LIQUID token, which serves as the payment option within its ecosystem. The presale is structured in stages, with token prices that increase with each subsequent stage. As you may expect, an earlier entry comes with lower pricing and higher staking APYs.
Early-stage presale staking often shows unusually high estimated yields due to low participation, but these figures change rapidly as more users join.
LiquidChain has a fixed total supply of 11,800,000,100 LIQUID tokens with a defined allocation model.
Allocation breakdown in project materials: 35% for development, 15% for treasury, 32.5% for marketing and ecosystem growth, 10% for rewards (including staking), and 7.5% for listings and exchange support.
LiquidChain says its angle isn’t fueled by hype and speculation. Considering that the multi-chain is already a reality, it needs the right infrastructure to make things smoother for everyone. Whether LIQUID becomes the solution everyone needs depends on execution, integration quality, and real usage.
For now, LiquidChain is positioning itself as an infrastructure-focused Layer 3 solution aimed at addressing a problem that still affects traders, users, and builders daily: liquidity fragmentation across the chains where most activity already occurs.
Its goals are big, and if it provides a solution, it could become popular if cross-chain execution becomes a dominant infrastructure theme in the next cycle.
Website: https://liquidchain.com/
Social: https://x.com/getliquidchain
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