I don’t think Vanar is trying to “win” by being the fastest chain on paper. the more interesting bet is modularity that actually ships: an execution layer for settlement, plus native layers for memory and reasoning so apps don’t have to bolt intelligence on later. Vanar describes this as a multi-layer stack built for AI workloads, where logic and data aren’t external dependencies.
the reasoning piece is Kayon, which Vanar positions as a natural language logic engine for contextual queries and compliance style automation.
the memory piece is Neutron, which frames data as programmable “Seeds” through semantic compression so it stays verifiable and usable onchain, not just stored.
that’s why “on chain reasoning” matters here: it’s not a feature. it’s the architecture.
