Vanar’s fee model because it solves a problem most chains still pretend is “normal,” where costs jump around so hard that real planning becomes a guessing game. Vanar aims for a fiat-priced fee target and then adjusts the fee dynamics based on VANRY’s market price, so the actual cost you pay stays stable and predictable even when the token moves. That’s not just a nice-to-have, it’s the kind of foundation that makes payments, subscriptions, and real-world finance apps feel possible without the constant fear that tomorrow’s costs break the product.

What makes it even more interesting is that Vanar actually documents how this is done at a system level, including a target around $0.0005 per transaction, with the token price being refreshed and validated using multiple market data sources so the chain isn’t relying on one single feed. When builders can estimate costs in real currency terms, it changes the way they design everything, because you can plan user fees, margins, and growth without living inside a “gas spike” nightmare. It feels like the kind of detail that makes a blockchain act less like an experiment and more like infrastructure.

And on the token side in the last 24 hours, VANRY has been hovering around the $0.0062–$0.0064 range with roughly $7M–$8M in 24h volume depending on which tracker you check, with supply figures showing about 2.29B circulating out of 2.4B max. I’m watching this project through a simple lens: if fees stay predictable and the chain keeps pushing toward real payments and real business use, then the long-term story becomes easier to believe, because stability is what real adoption quietly demands.

#Vanar @Vanarchain $VANRY

VANRY
VANRY
0.005999
-0.21%

#vanar