When you trade blockspace every day, you learn that “cheap” isn’t the same as “predictable.” For game studios and payment builders, the pain isn’t only high gas; it’s not knowing what gas will be next minute, which turns microtransactions into a budgeting nightmare. VanarChain’s docs describe fixed fees for about 90% of transaction types hovering near $0.0005, with fees recalibrated roughly every five minutes using a token-price feed and recorded in blocks via a feePerTx field. Developers can price a five-cent skin upgrade with confidence and skip the whole “estimate gas” dance in the UI.
Fair ordering matters just as much. Instead of auctions where bots outbid you for priority, Vanar describes a first come, first-served sequencing approach. In plain English: you don’t need to bribe the network to get your swap, mint, or payment processed. Fewer gas wars also means fewer weird failure modes to test, and a smoother UX when a game wants 50 tiny actions per minute.
It’s trending in early 2026 because chains are finally competing on developer friction, not slogans, and Vanar’s mainnet went live in June 2024. If throughput stays consistent, predictable fees plus fair ordering could make tiny, frequent payments feel like software not finance.

VANRY
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