Flux
  • Background
    • Background: Web3 Grew, the Data Layer Didn’t
  • What Flux Does
    • What Flux Brings That Was Missing
      • What Flux Does: System capabilities, not implementation
    • A Modular Workflow for Verifiable Data
    • The System Behind Sub-Second Proofs
    • More Than Access: Integrity, Speed, and Structure
    • Beyond Code: Participation and Control
  • Tokenomics
    • Tokenomics
      • Utility
      • Allocation
  • Roadmap
    • Roadmap
  • FAQ
    • FAQ
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  1. Background

Background: Web3 Grew, the Data Layer Didn’t

As of 2025, Web3 is entering a high-growth phase. According to Precedence Research, the global Web3 market is projected to grow from USD 462 million in 2025 to USD 99.75 billion by 2034, at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 41.18%. This acceleration is driven by rising demand for data privacy, the emergence of decentralized identity systems, and technological advances in the internet stack.

Despite this momentum, the current state of blockchain data infrastructure remains deeply limited. A study on arXiv.org highlights core challenges in existing data tooling: poor accessibility, limited scalability, lack of accuracy, and weak cross-chain interoperability.

At the same time, zero-knowledge proof (ZKP) technologies have seen significant advancements in 2025. Experts predict that proof performance and development tooling will improve dramatically, unlocking practical use cases for privacy and scalability.

Flux emerges at the intersection of these trends as a high-performance, verifiable data network that enables trustless, real-time, multi-chain data access. Designed for smart contracts, AI agents, and automated systems, Flux eliminates reliance on opaque middleware and delivers cryptographically validated results. It aims to become a foundational layer for Web3's trustless data economy, addressing the structural weaknesses of today's infrastructure.

NextWhat Flux Brings That Was Missing

Last updated 13 days ago