Sushi has launched on Kadena, enabling scalable Proof-of-Work DeFi with low fees, high security, and seamless trading on Sushi’s v2 pools.Sushi has launched on Kadena, enabling scalable Proof-of-Work DeFi with low fees, high security, and seamless trading on Sushi’s v2 pools.

Sushi Expands to Kadena, Unlocking New Opportunities for PoW-Based DeFi

2025/10/07 11:00
sushi

Sushi is now live on Kadena, giving traders and liquidity providers a fresh place to swap, stake, and experiment. The integration lets Sushi users access v2 pools on Kadena directly through Sushi’s familiar interface, swaps, LP positions, rewards and all the usual tools are available on a new Layer 1 built around proof-of-work.

Kadena isn’t another copy of the chains we’ve seen before. Its Chainweb design braids multiple parallel PoW chains together so the network can scale without giving up the security model PoW is known for. That architecture, together with newly added EVM compatibility, means teams can deploy Solidity contracts and take advantage of parallel execution and low gas costs without reaching for Layer 2s or switching to validator-based security. Kadena also ships its own Pact smart contract language, human-readable and pitched as easier to audit. and its creators stress energy efficiency as Chainweb scales.

A New Era for Secure and Scalable DeFi Trading

This summer, Kadena pushed the next chapter in that plan with a Chainweb EVM testnet that drew more than 50 projects and a $50 million grant fund to spur development. For DeFi builders and institutions looking for higher throughput without giving up PoW security, that combination is an appealing experiment.

For Sushi users, the change is practical: you can swap on Sushi’s v2 AMM on Kadena and provide liquidity to earn rewards, all through tools you already know. It’s a straightforward way to move capital into an environment that claims low fees and high throughput while keeping to a PoW security model.

The move matters because it stretches what many people assume about PoW blockchains. If Kadena delivers on its promises, sustained developer activity, real liquidity and the cost/security trade-offs it advertises, this could be an important example of DeFi running on an alternative L1 architecture. For now, Sushi’s presence simply gives traders and LPs one more place to deploy capital and see how a braided PoW approach handles the demands of modern decentralized finance.

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

US Regulator Signals Guidance on Stablecoins, Tokenized Deposit Insurance

US Regulator Signals Guidance on Stablecoins, Tokenized Deposit Insurance

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation is considering guidance for tokenized deposit insurance. The agency also plans to introduce an application process for stablecoins by the end of this year.Digital assets meet tradfi in London at the fmls25Stablecoins’ market capitalization reached $193 billion by 1 December last year, with transaction volumes of $27.1 trillion by November, nearly triple the previous year. Analysts project the sector could reach $3 trillion within five years. Excluding stablecoins, tokenized real-world assets rose over 60% to $13.5 billion, mainly in private credit and U.S. Treasurys.Regulator Signals Rules for Tokenized DepositsActing FDIC Chair Travis Hill said at the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia’s Fintech Conference that guidance on tokenized deposit insurance will eventually be released. “My view for a long time has been that a deposit is a deposit. Moving a deposit from a traditional-finance world to a blockchain or distributed-ledger world shouldn’t change the legal nature of it,” Hill said, according to Bloomberg.Regulator Sets Capital, Risk StandardsThe FDIC insures deposits at regulated banks. Hill said the agency is developing a framework for stablecoin issuance under the GENIUS Act. The regulator is working on standards for capital, reserves, and risk management. As of Friday, the stablecoin market capitalization was about $305 billion. In 2024, BlackRock launched a tokenized money market fund called BUIDL.JUST IN: 🇺🇸 FDIC drafts guidance for tokenized deposit insurance to help banks expand into digital assets. pic.twitter.com/HOLc3IvckI— Crypto India (@CryptooIndia) November 14, 2025UK Consultation Targets Systemic Stablecoin RiskMeanwhile, across the Atlantic, the Bank of England has opened a consultation on regulating sterling-denominated stablecoins. The framework targets tokens widely used for payments that could pose risks to financial stability. Proposed rules would require issuers to back part of their liabilities with BoE deposits and the remainder with short-term UK government debt. Limits on holdings would apply: £20,000 per coin for individuals and up to £10 million for businesses, with some exemptions. HM Treasury will designate systemically important providers, subject to BoE supervision. This article was written by Tareq Sikder at www.financemagnates.com.
Share
Financemagnates2025/11/14 18:11