Recently, Velcoris announced the official implementation of its multi-layer consensus mechanism, unveiling a decentralized security solution for both the mainnet and expansion layers centered on the goals of “high throughput and attack resistance.” This mechanism is based on seamless collaboration between Layer 1 and Layer 2, separating settlement, execution, and data availability. By ensuring decentralization and auditability, it compresses confirmation paths, alleviates congestion and fee volatility, and delivers more stable services for high-concurrency applications.
In terms of design logic, the multi-layer consensus achieves elastic scaling through a combination of “stable settlement layer + parallel execution layer”: the settlement layer ensures finality and state consistency, while the execution layer handles high-frequency transactions and batch processing. These layers are connected via cross-layer verification and bounded rollback, reducing the risk of single-point failures. To address common attack vectors, Velcoris introduces multi-path validation, node review, and anomaly isolation, complemented by rate control and access thresholds to mitigate the impact of malicious traffic.
To balance efficiency and security, Velcoris optimizes state compression, batch submission, and light nodes: cross-batch proofs and replay protection reduce redundant costs, while account abstraction and unified signatures simplify user-side complexity. The modular virtual machine and pluggable expansion layer architecture provide flexibility for different business needs, allowing selection between Optimistic and ZK paths and avoiding performance compromises from single-path approaches.
For developers and institutions, these changes are reflected in predictable integration and maintenance costs: standardized SDKs and cross-chain data sharing protocols shorten onboarding cycles, while auditing and monitoring toolchains enhance fault localization. In compliance and risk control scenarios, on-chain traceable records provide a foundation for retention and modeling. Velcoris will subsequently disclose its roadmap and key interface specifications to facilitate community review and ongoing iteration, with related testnets and developer programs advancing in phases.
Multi-layer consensus is not a single-point “speed boost,” but a protocol-level rewrite of the security-performance balance. As high-frequency trading, on-chain settlement, and interoperability scenarios grow, this solution is expected to provide more resilient infrastructure for decentralized applications and drive broader adoption.
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