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Espresso ☕️
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Building the base layer for L2s: unlocking real-time BFT finality; crosschain composability; and universal compatibility powering our multichain future ☕️
- Replying to @EspressoSysWith Presto, we used NFTs to prove the mechanism. The same principle applies wherever chains need to trust each other: crosschain payments, collateral mobility, onchain financial products. Fast finality isn't a nice-to-have; it's what makes a multichain system composable.
- Replying to @EspressoSysWe demonstrated this with Presto. Users minted NFTs on @ApeChainHUB using funds on @RariChain, or the reverse, no waiting, no bridging. What would have taken minutes took seconds. Not by cutting corners. It's what fast, secure finality at the base layer makes possible.
00:00 - Replying to @EspressoSysLike Ethereum, Espresso is secured by decentralized BFT consensus. Unlike Ethereum, it was designed specifically to serve other chains, & finality takes ~3 seconds instead of 16 minutes. Any bridge, relayer, or app reading from Espresso can act on that confirmation immediately.
- Replying to @EspressoSysThe reason is structural. Ethereum wasn't built to be a base layer for other chains. It was built for a world where every app runs as a smart contract in its single execution environment. Slow finality doesn’t matter there. It matters a lot when apps live on different chains.
- Crosschain composability has a finality problem. Bridges need reliable confirmation of source chain state before they can act. On Ethereum, that could take 16 minutes. Every seamless-looking crosschain product is working around this problem, not solving it 🧵
GIF - L2s are not dead. But most general-purpose chains with nothing to differentiate them are. Chains built around a specific app, user base, or financial product have a clear reason to exist. @benafisch discusses the state of the L2 ecosystem in @CoinDesk's Protocol newsletter.
- When @ApeChainHUB integrated with Espresso, it kept everything. Its sequencer, its 250ms preconfs, its architecture The one change: Espresso finalizes its batches first Unlocking: - BFT finality in seconds - Sequencer equivocation protection - Real-time crosschain composability
- Why are banks and asset managers tokenizing financial products? Distribution, says @benafisch. Going onchain meets users where they already are. Stablecoin holders can put idle capital to work in structured financial products without off-ramping to fiat.
00:00 - Espresso ☕️ repostedRARI Chain is shutting down. Our genesis NFT collection, The Composables, lives there. Here’s our plan for ensuring The Composables live on. Before @RariChain closes, we’ll take a snapshot of all holder wallets. We’ll then remint the collection on a new chain and airdrop
GIF - Replying to @EspressoSysThe Litecoin incident showed how dangerous it is for crosschain systems to act on source-chain activity that can still reorg. LitVM's Espresso integration addresses that directly. Bridge safety rests on Espresso-finalized state, not probabilistic finality or a single sequencer.
- Replying to @EspressoSysNote: While Espresso finalizes all LitVM-originating transactions, deposits coming from Litecoin, Ethereum, or any other source chain still inherit that chain's finality model. The fix is a conservative wait on inbound deposits. Everything else on LitVM moves at Espresso speed.






