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Friday Nov 28 2025 13:20
4 min
The Avail Nexus mainnet launched this week, heralding a significant shift in how assets are transferred across different blockchains. Rather than introduce another bridging solution, Nexus seeks to make multichain execution as intuitive as a single button press, circumventing the historically clunky crypto UX and associated operational challenges.
Nexus directly addresses a fundamental pain point in Web3: the persistent struggle of users with on-chain assets who are often forced to navigate bridging protocols, swap tokens for gas, and hop between different applications just to utilize their funds. Prabal Banerjee, co-founder of Avail, stated to Cointelegraph, "Users should be less burdened by the intricacies of chains and underlying infrastructure. The UX should prioritize abstraction (unified balances, one-click flows), but critical security and contextual signals must remain transparent and explainable, as security and choice are paramount."
He argues that the core issue isn't a lack of pathways between chains, but the absence of a foundational coordination layer. This layer would reside within applications, silently orchestrating multichain interactions. While current bridge and decentralized exchange (DEX) aggregators propose optimal routes across chains, they still function by stringing together a series of steps: bridge here, swap there, bridge back. This translates to a sequence of imperative, multi-step processes executed across autonomous systems, offering limited guarantees if a step fails mid-execution. Banerjee posits that this model has reached its limits: liquidity remains fragmented, the user experience is fragile, and users are forced to operate as infrastructure engineers rather than simply utilizing applications.
Instead of requiring users to select a route, Nexus accepts signed "intents" – statements of desired end-states coupled with constraints. It then outsources the "how" to a solver network capable of sourcing liquidity across multiple chains and providing an "exact-out" execution plan. Essentially, the user specifies the desired outcome, not the process to achieve it.
The front-end interface is designed to provide users with a consolidated view of their balance and enable direct transactions from within the application, regardless of where the assets are custodied. Nexus automates the complexities of gas, approvals, routing, and crosschain accounting, allowing users to interact seamlessly with applications rather than wrestling with the underlying blockchain mechanics.
The focus is on user retention, not simply cost reduction. Banerjee describes the current problem as "a fragmented experience where users need to know and understand the chains on which apps are built rather than just using the apps." Nexus integrates decentralized applications (DApps) to create self-contained environments where users remain engaged, with their entire value represented as a single, unified balance within the application.
This new architecture shifts the trust burden away from bridges and towards solvers. Intents introduce new challenges related to Miner Extractable Value (MEV) and routing, while solvers and flows become critical infrastructure components. To mitigate risk, funds are secured within on-chain vault contracts and released only when solvers precisely fulfill the terms within a defined timeframe. Failed routes trigger an automatic rollback, restoring user funds to their original state.
Other modular and shared-sequencer designs necessitate fundamental modifications at the blockchain protocol level, which can hinder their adoption by large, established production chains.
"Many shared sequencer and shared bridge efforts require chain-level modifications," Banerjee explains, "which are always tricky to do, especially with large production chains. Hence, their adoption has been much slower than anticipated."
Avail’s approach is strictly application-layer focused: software development kits (SDKs), APIs, and modular "elements" that can be directly integrated into existing DApps and rollups without requiring modifications to the underlying chain consensus or protocol infrastructure. This is fundamentally supported by Avail's data availability verification capabilities. Banerjee believes that most competitors "try to solve crosschain UX at the coordination layer or at the chain level." In contrast, Nexus consolidates the UX into a unified flow: one balance, one interface, one operational universe.
Early positive signs have emerged from leaders within the broader modular ecosystem. Monad’s mainnet launch specifically highlighted Nexus, suggesting that some Layer 1 blockchains view this type of execution-layer abstraction as a strategic infrastructure component rather than a mere integration.
If Nexus succeeds, users may become indifferent to the underlying chain powering their applications, thereby empowering a select group of coordination layers that manage intent routing, control solver order flow, and allocate liquidity. For Avail, the ambition is clear: to create a multichain internet that functions as a seamless, user-centric network operating invisibly beneath the surface – and to achieve this without inadvertently becoming the new central intermediary.
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