Capital City Times
Keeta has officially been confirmed as the fastest blockchain ever recorded. Independent benchmarks and internal performance tests show the network achieving over 10 million transactions per second, with finality times averaging under 400 milliseconds. This places Keeta ahead of every major blockchain in history, including Solana, Avalanche, and even theoretical models from research institutions.
Unlike traditional blockchains, Keeta doesn’t rely on a linear sequence of blocks. It operates using a Directed Acyclic Graph (DAG) combined with a Delegated Proof of Stake (dPoS) consensus. This architecture allows it to process transactions in parallel, removing the bottlenecks that limit other chains. It skips the memory pool entirely, enabling transactions to be validated and settled almost instantly.
The technology stack behind Keeta includes vote-stapling mechanisms for rapid consensus, X.509 digital certificates for identity verification, and auto-scaling infrastructure running on optimized cloud environments. Together, these features give Keeta a blend of performance, compliance, and scalability unmatched by current protocols.
The network’s focus is not just speed, but utility. Keeta was designed for large-scale institutional use cases, including government-compliant digital IDs, tokenized asset issuance, and cross-border financial settlements. It supports real-name wallets, KYC and AML integration, fiat anchors via ACH and SWIFT, and sub-cent transaction fees, making it one of the only chains prepared for regulated, high-volume applications.
Keeta’s token, $KTA, launched in March 2025 and quickly drew attention after early rumors of backing from major figures in tech and finance, including Eric Schmidt. Although the launch was followed by skepticism due to an undisclosed token generation event, the team provided rapid transparency, locked liquidity, and calmed investor concerns. Today, $KTA is seen not just as a token, but as the foundation of what could become the most institutionally viable blockchain infrastructure in the space.
With mainnet expected to launch in June 2025, all eyes are now on Keeta. If it proves capable of maintaining this level of throughput in a live, fully permissionless environment, it won’t just be the fastest blockchain in history—it will be the first that meets the demands of both regulators and enterprise at scale.