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Sep 19, 2025
25
minutes read
Tycho: Blockchain Platform With A National Vision
Building A Resilient Digital Nation
In a volatile and fiercely competitive global economy, governments around the world face an urgent mandate: deeply modernize their digital infrastructure to raise the efficiency of public services, attract resources, and enable strategic investment. The core objective is to optimize business processes, reduce operating costs, eliminate corruption risks, and increase transparency. Data from global indices shows a clear divide: while frontrunner countries are making breakthrough advances, the gap with the rest continues to widen. The United Nations E-Government Survey 2024 highlights overall improvements in digital public services, yet also warns of persistent barriers, particularly limited infrastructure and skills.
The question is no longer WHETHER to pursue digital transformation, but HOW to build a digital state that is truly sustainable, resilient, and adaptive for the future.
Core Requirements For A Digital Transformation Platform
As governments and organizations move through digital transformation, they must overcome substantial barriers to ensure success and sustainability. Drawing on real-world experience, a core platform must meet the following requirements to deliver comprehensive effectiveness:
Mastery of strategic and core technology: The platform must ensure technological sovereignty and security, enabling governments and organizations to develop and operate systems independently, without dependence on external solutions.
Safety, security, and transparency: The technology must close operational and cybersecurity gaps while creating a transparent, tamper-evident system that prevents and eliminates corruption risks.
Synchronization and integration: The platform should act as a “common language” for ministries and organizations, allowing data and processes to synchronize quickly and efficiently. This saves significant manpower and public funds while maximizing the effectiveness of multi-agency integration projects.
Legal and ethical compliance: The solution must satisfy legal and ethical requirements, guaranteeing end-user safety and rights in all digital transactions and services.
Breakthrough speed: The platform should accelerate digitalization at a superior pace, helping the country quickly catch up with leading nations.
Built-in risk controls: The platform needs integrated tools to handle complex requirements such as anti-money laundering (AML), counter-terrorist financing, and other illicit-activity safeguards.
Today, governments and enterprises do not need more isolated pilot projects. They need a clear, sovereign core infrastructure – one that policy teams can trust, engineers can scale, and markets can readily connect to. Tycho meets this need by enabling the safe rollout of programs such as stablecoins, real-world asset tokenization (RWA), and a “single policy engine” for public services, while ensuring legal compliance and readiness for regional integration. Just as important, Tycho is designed for phased deployment, delivering concrete results within a single budget cycle. This reflects the essential requirement: a solution that is not only technologically advanced, but purpose-built for the specific needs of a digital nation. While many core platforms reveal limits in sovereignty, speed, transparency, and compliance, Tycho stands out as a platform designed from the start to meet these stringent criteria comprehensively.
For that reason, a platform built from the outset for this mission is required – and that platform is Tycho Protocol. Tycho is not only a new-generation blockchain protocol; it is core infrastructure engineered to satisfy the highest standards of a modern, transparent, and sustainable digital state. From this foundation, Tycho delivers superior benefits and opens the path to realizing a comprehensive national digital vision.
Tycho’s Distinctive Advantages

National & Commercial Ecosystem on the Tycho Platform
Tycho Protocol, developed by Broxus, follows a practical approach: it starts from the performance envelope and governance controls a country or large organization actually needs, then makes everything else modular so components can be extended, replaced, and integrated according to policy.
1. Performance And Finality At National And Enterprise Scale
Tycho’s DAG architecture combined with parallel smart-contract execution enables 100,000+ transactions per second with near-instant finality. That capacity is enough to process critical workloads at the same time – electronic ID verification, public procurement auctions, tax reconciliation, and retail payments.
Deterministic transaction ordering together with two-phase commit and reconciliation reduces operational risk during peak periods. Adaptive resource management keeps performance steady even during sensitive moments such as elections, benefit disbursements, or tax season.
2. Sovereignty By Design
Tycho can be deployed on-premises or in a national cloud. Role-based permissions, regulator-operated nodes, and open-source code allow full auditability, local security review, and policy control. This is the foundation for data residency and technological autonomy.
This approach also aligns with Vietnam’s direction, where blockchain is treated as trusted infrastructure to increase transparency, reduce corruption, strengthen interoperability across agencies, and serve as a foundational technology for Digital Government, Digital Society, Digital Economy, and Digital Finance.
3. Whole-Of-Government Interoperability And A “Common Language” For Data
Tycho operates as a shared ledger that lets agencies easily share, verify, and protect public records against unauthorized changes. Administrative processes can be automated by smart contracts, cutting duplication, saving resources, and improving auditability.
This is especially suitable for countries that want a common integration framework to guide digital infrastructure design and to coordinate institutions efficiently.
4. Friendly To Developers And Policy
Tycho supports Solidity, modular governance, and a full set of compliance and observability tools. Legal and policy rules can be coded once and reused across ministries and banks, which also enables controlled sandbox testing of new policies.
At the infrastructure layer, authorities can set limits, whitelists, and reporting – meeting the goal of “programmable policy” that many countries are pursuing.
5. Aligned With National Digital Strategy
Tycho delivers practical benefits: lower system costs, elimination of duplication, and broader automation; new digital revenue channels through online services, asset tokenization, and platform models; a larger tax base thanks to traceable digital transactions; stronger FDI attraction through a transparent, predictable environment; and a closer government–citizen relationship via user-centric digital services.
In finance, Tycho is well-suited for CBDC programs, cross-border payments, asset tokenization, modernization of public financial systems, and reinforcement of monetary sovereignty.
6. Modular Expansion – Avoiding “Technology Islands”
Instead of each ministry building a separate ledger, Tycho provides a unified, policy-programmable layer. From this base, specialized modules – land registry, health records, e-procurement, digital identity – can be added step by step, shortening multi-agency integration timelines.
This modern approach matches the reference architectures many countries, including Vietnam, are adopting for blockchain-enabled digital infrastructure.
7. Fit For National Roadmaps – With Quick, Visible Results
A key advantage is Tycho’s phased deployment model, so concrete results appear within a single budget cycle. The system is also ready to connect to priority pillars such as identity, taxation, procurement, social protection, justice, and cross-border data.
Tycho not only overcomes the limits of “open-internet” common platforms, it also aligns with the vision and rollout path for a nation’s Digital Government, Digital Society, Digital Economy, and Digital Finance. With superior performance, sovereignty-first design, deep interoperability, and flexible modular architecture, Tycho becomes the core infrastructure for building a transparent, resilient, and sustainable digital nation.
To understand Tycho more fully, it helps to know Broxus, the designer and developer of the protocol. With experience delivering national-scale blockchain infrastructure across regions, Broxus is the team behind a strategic platform that opens the way to durable digital nations.
What Is Broxus?
Broxus is a full-stack blockchain infrastructure company and the developer of the Tycho platform. We specialize in national-scale systems. Our strength is not only technology, but also hands-on experience delivering large platforms for governments and central banks across multiple countries.
Capabilities And Strengths
National infrastructure. Broxus focuses on country-scale solutions such as CBDC and stablecoin platforms, national registries, cross-border payment rails, and compliance tooling.
Technology transfer. The entire stack follows an open-source philosophy, can be deployed on-premises, is easy to audit and extend, and – most importantly – allows knowledge and operational control to be handed over to domestic teams.
Proven reliability. Broxus has delivered regional and national digital-infrastructure projects that meet strict requirements for speed, security, and transparency.
Modular architecture. Tycho, developed by Broxus, is a modular core protocol that can be extended to each country’s needs while remaining compatible with its legal framework and development strategy.
Strategic Vision
Broxus does not aim to create more short-term pilots. We provide a sovereign, clear, and durable base layer so that:
Governments can trust and control it.
Engineers can scale and operate it reliably.
Markets and businesses can connect directly to it.
Our long-term vision is to be a strategic partner for countries on their digital-transformation journey – building a transparent, resilient ecosystem of finance, data, and public services, and laying the foundation for regional and global integration (for example, cross-border CBDC links, tokenization of real-world assets, and compliant, secure transactions).
Broxus is a comprehensive blockchain-infrastructure company focused on national-level systems – from CBDC and stablecoins to national registries, cross-border payment rails, and compliance tools. Our teams build and transfer capability (open source, on-prem options) and have delivered large-scale platforms in multiple regions. Tycho is the modular core protocol in this solution set.
The Broxus Ecosystem
Beyond the Tycho Protocol as the foundational infrastructure, Broxus offers a complete suite of products and platforms to build both public and private digital ecosystems:
Stabletek. An end-to-end platform for asset tokenization – including stablecoins, CBDC, RWA, intellectual property, and more. By automating critical workflows and enforcing role-based access, Stabletek makes tokenization transparent, compliant, secure, and convenient.
Carbon Credit Registry. A platform that manages the full lifecycle of carbon assets, connecting credit issuers, emitters, auditors, investors, and regulators. It helps governments ensure fair pricing for carbon assets, attract investment, and meet obligations under the Kyoto Protocol.
SparX. An enterprise-grade Web3 wallet – the “multi-tool” for digital assets. It supports standard and multisig contract wallets, secure private-key management, easy dApp integration, and universal support for all TVM networks.
FlatQube. An advanced decentralized exchange (DEX) that combines convenience with powerful features such as AMM and limit orders, liquidity-pool management, token-creation tools, DAO, and liquidity mining with built-in vesting and emission-rate controls.
TVM Explorer. A powerful analytics suite for Tycho that processes transactions quickly and provides real-time views of activity (transactions, messages, smart-contract interactions, blocks, tokens, and more).
ChainConnect. A universal cross-chain connectivity toolkit for moving liquidity, data, and smart-contract calls safely and reliably between networks. Supports TVM, EVM, and Solana today, and can be extended to any smart-contract platform.
Gravix. A professional derivatives-trading platform with leverage up to 200×, enabling trading on indices of digital assets, equities, commodities, currencies, and more. A convenient interface with deep customization delivers a best-in-class trader experience.
Liquid Staking. A flexible staking platform for TVM that does not require locking assets. It optimizes liquidity attraction for validators, reduces market pressure, and allows participation in validation without giving up control.
DAO. A robust decision-making platform that incorporates leading governance practices: proposal-lifecycle management, staking, on-chain execution, analytics, discussion tools, and more.
TokStock. An advanced NFT marketplace supporting multiple NFT types (images, services, PDF documents, etc.) and trading modes (fixed sale, sealed-bid auction, open auction). It can serve as the basis for e-ticketing, art auctions, or even traditional exchanges.
Developer Tooling. A broad toolkit for developers – SDKs, IDE plugins, documentation, APIs, and self-hosted services – so builders can fully leverage the Tycho platform and the Broxus ecosystem.
Common Pitfalls When Implementing Blockchain
Even with clear policy intent, many national programs still run into the following mistakes.
Prioritizing Familiarity Over Real Load
Teams gravitate to popular stacks because talent is available. But many public L1 designs (e.g., EVM-based networks) were built for an open internet environment, not for national-scale workloads or stable fees. Even Ethereum’s docs point to scalability and fee volatility – problems rollups try to mitigate. That can be fine for startups, but risky to copy-paste into public services at infrastructure scale.
Underestimating Capacity Needs
Identification peaks, tender deadlines, elections, tax filings, and subsidy disbursements can spike to tens of thousands of transactions per second. If you design for averages, systems fail at decisive moments. A national base layer must target high throughput, low latency, and deterministic finality.
Building “Islands”
Running separate ledgers per ministry – or buying closed vendor stacks – slows integration and fragments data policy. OECD has long warned against silo-first digital government; whole-of-government interoperability is the real differentiator.
Over-Engineering The Design
Complex multi-system architectures tend to add risk, not resilience. What ministries actually need is a unified layer that is policy-programmable, easy to audit, deployed on national infrastructure, and simple for local teams to scale.
Technology Over Integrated Vision
Tools don’t create value on their own – the opportunities they unlock do. Better technology expands the option set; strategy determines whether you capture it. In Broxus projects we start with a pragmatic transformation roadmap – mapping current processes, selecting the few touchpoints where a blockchain layer adds clear value, and sequencing deployments, configurations, and integrations so change lands smoothly.
Sacrificing End-User Experience
People resist change, especially when they must learn new tools. Too many programs add “blockchain” and shift the complexity to users. Our view is simple: the move from legacy systems should be invisible – or make the experience better. Wallets, payments, and approvals should feel familiar while policy logic and auditability live under the hood.
Short-Term Thinking
This is not a machine you install and leave – it is a long-term operating layer. The base needs headroom for a decade or more, room to grow, and safe upgrade paths for the protocol and each smart contract. With that horizon in mind, we designed Tycho for longevity – combining proven components and upgrade patterns so the protocol evolves instead of aging.
Treating Interoperability As Optional
Agencies often launch separate ledgers and plan to “connect later.” Later rarely arrives. A sovereign stack must assume cross-agency and cross-border flows from day one – shared data models, reusable policy modules, and controlled bridges – so services compose instead of compete.
Under-Specifying Governance
Projects stall when no one can answer who operates, who upgrades, and who audits. National or corporate networks need clear roles for operator, regulator, and application owners – plus a transparent change process. Governance is not paperwork – it is how trust scales.
Ignoring Privacy By Design
Putting raw personal or business data on a permanent ledger slows adoption and raises risk. The right pattern is “prove less, verify more” – credentials and yes/no checks, consent receipts, and minimal exposure of sensitive fields. When privacy is built in, compliance and user trust follow.
Over-Customizing The Base Layer
Every exception baked into the core becomes technical debt. Keep the base simple and stable; move product logic into well-governed modules and contracts. Audits get easier, upgrades get safer, and onboarding new teams gets faster.
No Plan For Talent And Operations
Technology ships; institutions stay the same. Success needs repeatable runbooks, SLOs, and hands-on training for teams that will run and extend the network. A small center of excellence – with tooling, templates, and reviews – pays for itself in fewer outages and faster delivery.
A Purpose-Built Path
Broxus develops the Tycho Protocol with a practical approach: we start from the performance envelope and governance controls a nation truly needs, then make every other component modular and flexible.
Throughput and finality at state scale. Tycho’s DAG architecture and parallel smart-contract execution are engineered for 100,000+ TPS with near-instant finality – enough to run national ID checks, public-procurement auctions, tax reconciliation, and retail payments at the same time.
Predictable operations. Deterministic transaction ordering and a two-phase commit / reconciliation flow reduce operational risk under heavy load, while adaptive resource management keeps performance steady during peaks – elections, benefit payouts, or tax season.
Sovereignty by design. Tycho supports on-premise or national-cloud deployment, role-based permissioning, regulator nodes, and open source code – enabling full auditability, local security review, and policy control. This is the foundation for data residency and technological autonomy.
Developer- and policy-friendly. Support for Solidity contracts, modular governance, and built-in compliance tooling makes it easy to encode rules once and reuse them across ministries, agencies, and banks – aligning day-to-day delivery with policy goals.
Broxus delivery experience
National Case Study: Mirasmanda and the HUMO stablecoin
Uzbekistan, a country of nearly 40 million people, is building a sovereign digital finance infrastructure on Tycho Protocol in partnership with Broxus. A cornerstone of this program is HUMO, a stablecoin pegged to the Uzbek sum (UZS) and issued directly within the national payment system.
The project runs on Mirasmanda, a national distributed-data and blockchain network developed with Broxus, designed to host and process tokenized financial instruments and digital payments.
For a trade-oriented economy, this infrastructure enables supervised, always-on settlement, reduces transaction costs, strengthens commerce with neighboring countries, and opens new models for working-capital finance and SME exports.
Technically, Tycho is a strong fit: a sovereign ledger with deterministic finality and regulator-grade observability lets HUMO operate with predictable fees and programmable safeguards (limits, whitelists, reporting). The same foundation paves the way for future asset tokenization – for example, local bonds or infrastructure assets – within national law. Global initiatives in tokenization and cross-border CBDC – such as Project Guardian and mBridge – indicate how Uzbekistan could connect when ready, turning domestic capability into regional advantage.
Enterprise Case Study: Hamster Network – Public-Grade Rails For A Telegram Game At National Scale
Hamster Network was built to power the largest Telegram-based game, serving tens of millions of active users. The goal was ambitious: move the entire game logic onto a public network so that gameplay, progress, rewards, and community events run under transparent, verifiable rules – and so partners can plug in without custom integrations.
To achieve this, the team launched a public chain that executes all smart-contract logic for the game, then established a two-way bridge with the TON network. Assets can move in and out, wallets and exchanges familiar to the TON community remain usable, and the everyday player experience inside Telegram stays intact. Under the hood, the infrastructure can scale to real-time surges without forcing users to change habits.
During large community campaigns, the network sustained over 34,000 transactions per second in live conditions while keeping deterministic finality and low latency. Fees remained predictable – essential for a mass-market audience – and operators retained regulator-grade visibility and control at the infrastructure level.
The rationale for choosing Tycho is straightforward. A project with a community this large is comparable to a small nation – it needs a platform that can host national-scale activity. Tycho provides that envelope through high throughput, parallel execution, and deterministic finality, with policy modules that keep product logic separate from the core. That makes upgrades safer and audits simpler. The bridge to TON anchors Hamster in an ecosystem players already know, while Tycho itself delivers the scale, predictability, and operational reliability required for a durable in-game economy.
Nda Case Studies: What This Looks Like In Practice
Carbon Credit Tokenization And Trading – Middle East
For a national climate program, we designed and delivered a sovereign platform that turns carbon credits into digital instruments with clear provenance.
Stakeholders – project developers, verifiers, registries, and market participants – onboard through verifiable credentials; issuance and certification flows are encoded as policy modules so every step is traceable.
Credits move through pre-CAC and CAC markets – i.e., pre-compliance and compliance – with built-in checks for double-counting, retirement, and secondary trading. All transactions are auditable end-to-end, while raw project data stays off-chain to protect confidentiality.
Tycho’s deterministic finality, regulator-grade nodes, and event logs give supervisors live visibility into issuance, transfers, and retirements, so reporting aligns with national and international standards. The outcome is a transparent market that lowers reconciliation costs and raises trust – without introducing new data silos.
Mobility-As-A-Service At City Scale – Middle East
In one of the region’s most significant cities, we prototyped a blockchain-based MaaS fabric where daily commutes, routing, visitor registration, payments, and bookings run on a shared policy layer.
Transit operators, parking providers, hotels, and restaurants join through standard onboarding, while users keep familiar apps and wallets – the blockchain remains under the hood.
Tickets, passes, and incentives are issued as programmable instruments, enabling rules like fare capping, off-peak rewards, or event-based access that can be audited and tuned in real time.
Land Registry Transformation – East Africa
We led the analysis and target design for modernizing a national land and title system where fraud, fragmented records, and slow transfers were damaging trust and investment.
The work began with process mapping – how titles are created, updated, encumbered, and transferred – and continued with a data model that anchors on authoritative sources rather than copying sensitive records on-chain.
Tycho provides the tamper-evident event trail – application, verification, lien, transfer, and dispute resolution – while privacy is preserved through scoped credentials and consent receipts.
Registrars and courts gain a consistent record of actions with deterministic timestamps; citizens and lenders gain faster, more reliable transactions; ministries gain cross-agency interoperability instead of isolated databases.
Models Of Collaboration
Broxus offers several collaboration models so you can choose the level of ownership, support, and deployment speed that fits your goals. Each model can be tailored for technological sovereignty, security, and the local regulatory context.
Open Source (Free)
You use Tycho and related modules from our public repositories, run them on your own infrastructure, and follow community best practices. Broxus provides documentation and community guidance; deployment, upgrades, and support are handled by your internal team.
Turnkey Deployment Of The Network And Ecosystem Components
Broxus deploys the core network and selected ecosystem services in your environment, with optional interface customization and branding. Source code can remain under license or be transferred, depending on policy and procurement needs. Handover includes runbooks, CI/CD templates, and baseline operating procedures so your team can take over day-to-day operations.
Turnkey Deployment With Consulting, Process Analysis, And Capability Transfer
Beyond deployment, Broxus analyzes current processes, identifies integration points, and co-designs a phased transformation roadmap. We train operators, engineers, and product owners; help convert policy into reusable modules; and guide integration with identity, payments, and registries. The goal is a smooth cutover – minimal disruption for end users and maximum reuse of existing infrastructure.
Long-Term Partnership With Full Transformation Support
In this model, Broxus serves as your strategic and technical partner throughout the entire program. This can follow a build–operate–transfer path, or a managed-operations model with SLAs. We co-own the roadmap, measure outcomes against service-level objectives, and continuously improve policy modules, performance, and governance as adoption scales.
Conclusion
As countries and organizations search for digital infrastructure that is sovereign, secure, and stable, choosing the right strategic partner becomes decisive. Tycho Protocol, developed by Broxus, pairs exceptional performance with a sound architectural foundation – not just a next-generation blockchain protocol, but a base layer purpose-built for national-scale operations.
With experience delivering government-grade projects across multiple countries, Broxus combines advanced technology with a practical transformation roadmap and flexible engagement models. This is more than a technical platform – it is a partnership program where policy teams can trust the system, engineers can scale it, and markets can connect easily.
Choosing Broxus means choosing a reliable, experienced partner who ensures every investment in national digital infrastructure rests on a solid foundation, remains adaptable for the long term, and aligns with global standards. Tycho helps address immediate challenges and opens a sustainable path for the growth of Digital Government – Digital Economy – Digital Finance – Digital Society.