Brevis is an intelligent platform focused on zero-knowledge proof computation that has recently gained significant attention. The project team announced a total token supply of 1 billion, with an initial circulation of 250 million. It is understood that the project is expected to launch in the first quarter of 2026, and a compliant platform has already included it in its listing plans.
From the funding perspective, things look promising—leading exchanges and Polychain are leading the investment, with a round totaling $7 million. The founding team also has a solid background, having previously started ventures in the blockchain space.
But frankly, this track is now quite crowded. The exploration of zero-knowledge proof applications is still in its early stages, and the market's demand and capacity for such projects remain uncertain. Projects with similar directions have emerged in clusters over the past two years, making competition fierce. Whether they can break through in the future depends on real progress in technology and application implementation. A successful funding round doesn't necessarily mean long-term optimism; it's also crucial to consider whether the market truly needs so many similar competitors.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
15 Likes
Reward
15
7
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
ApyWhisperer
· 6h ago
7 million in funding sounds good, but with such fierce competition in the industry, can it really survive until 2026?
View OriginalReply0
FlashLoanKing
· 6h ago
With so many similar projects in the ZK track, good funding looks nice but doesn't matter; true ability is what counts.
View OriginalReply0
DefiPlaybook
· 6h ago
Based on on-chain data analysis, the ZK track is indeed now oversaturated. A funding of 7 million USD sounds good, but the question is—does the market really need the N+1th ZK solution? It won't be launched until Q1 2026, so it will take more than a year to see real application deployment. From this perspective, the funding scale and the list are no longer sufficient to support the long-term optimistic logic.
View OriginalReply0
StableCoinKaren
· 6h ago
The fundraising is indeed good, but this track is really competitive now. It feels like a new round of project survival of the fittest is about to begin.
View OriginalReply0
TokenomicsDetective
· 6h ago
There are so many projects in the zk track, can they all really survive? It feels a bit like stacking up.
View OriginalReply0
OldLeekMaster
· 6h ago
Funding is good, but the track is crowded. In the past two years, zero-knowledge proof projects have been piling up, and I really don't know how many will survive in the end.
View OriginalReply0
GamefiEscapeArtist
· 7h ago
It's zero-knowledge proof again. If projects keep piling up in this track, it will end in a dead end.
Brevis is an intelligent platform focused on zero-knowledge proof computation that has recently gained significant attention. The project team announced a total token supply of 1 billion, with an initial circulation of 250 million. It is understood that the project is expected to launch in the first quarter of 2026, and a compliant platform has already included it in its listing plans.
From the funding perspective, things look promising—leading exchanges and Polychain are leading the investment, with a round totaling $7 million. The founding team also has a solid background, having previously started ventures in the blockchain space.
But frankly, this track is now quite crowded. The exploration of zero-knowledge proof applications is still in its early stages, and the market's demand and capacity for such projects remain uncertain. Projects with similar directions have emerged in clusters over the past two years, making competition fierce. Whether they can break through in the future depends on real progress in technology and application implementation. A successful funding round doesn't necessarily mean long-term optimism; it's also crucial to consider whether the market truly needs so many similar competitors.