Vanar says VANRY is the token that powers its AI-focused blockchain system. Instead of being only a normal Layer-1 chain, Vanar describes a full stack with five connected parts. The base is Vanar Chain, the main blockchain. On top of it are two “AI brain” parts: Neutron, which Vanar calls semantic memory (like storage that understands meaning), and Kayon, which Vanar calls contextual reasoning (like thinking with context). Two more parts, Axon and Flows, are shown as “coming soon,” meaning they’re planned but not fully live yet.
Vanar also highlights speed. Its documents say blocks are designed to be fast, with a maximum block time of about 3 seconds, to make apps feel quick and smooth.
It also talks about a danger during heavy traffic: someone could spam big transactions to fill block space and slow the network for everyone. To fight that, Vanar’s whitepaper suggests fixed fee levels based on transaction size, so large spam becomes expensive. It also describes adjusting fees using a VANRY price reference so users can get fees that stay more stable in USD value even if the token price changes.
For the technical base, Vanar says it uses GETH (Go-Ethereum) with custom changes. For validators, it describes Proof of Authority guided by Proof of Reputation, meaning trusted validators and reputation/community selection are part of the model.
A CoinMarketCap update page dated Feb 18, 2026 also repeats the idea of an AI-native launch milestone and that Axon/Flows are still upcoming, but that page is a secondary summary, not the main official source.
In short, Vanar is selling the idea of a fast blockchain with built-in memory and reasoning layers for AI apps, while trying to stay usable when traffic gets high.