If we are being real, most people treat the "Submit" button like a magic trick where things just happen. But in the Vanar System, that click is actually the start of a very deliberate journey. As the User, you set the gears in motion, but it is the Vanar Chain that does the heavy lifting first. It serves as the primary ground for execution, making sure your request is anchored before the rest of the system even moves. By locking in the execution layer early, Vanar avoids that "hollow" process where speed comes at the cost of stability.
Then you have Neutron, which is the silent engine keeping the whole thing from falling apart. Think of it as a high-precision digital archive. That is Neutron. It focuses entirely on "Structured Data," which means it refuses to treat information like a junk drawer. It organizes, stores, and retrieves data so the entire system can function without lag. In a world where "messy data" usually breaks things, there is something incredibly solid about a system that knows exactly where every piece of info lives.
But the data is just raw input until Kayon starts asking questions. Kayon is the "Logic and Validation" filter that makes sure no one is cutting corners. It is a high-speed processor that scrutinizes every on-chain rule to see if a transaction is actually "legit." It acts like a relentless auditor watching every move in real-time. Kayon evaluates the rules so the system never has to guess, providing the kind of strict validation that a serious financial infrastructure actually requires.
Once Kayon is satisfied, Axon and Flows takes over the execution. If Kayon is the brain, Axon is the muscle that gets the job done. It manages the "Orchestrated Workflows" and makes the final decision to Approve or Deny based on the logic provided. This seamless automation leads straight to the Finalized Result where the network state is updated and the work is done. It is a lot of effort for a single user action, but that kind of rigor is exactly what makes the system feel reliable.
