Bitcoin Solaris Offers 10,000 TPS, 2-Second Finality, Challenges Polygon

Coin WorldSunday, May 11, 2025 12:55 pm ET
2min read

Polygon, a leading Layer-2 solution provider, has been instrumental in enhancing Ethereum's infrastructure by offering fast and scalable solutions. These solutions include rollup models, sidechains, and ZK-based scaling techniques, which have significantly reduced transaction costs and increased speed without altering Ethereum's core structure. However, these advancements come with trade-offs, such as reliance on bridge mechanics, separate settlement layers, and complex developer tooling.

Recently, attention has shifted to a new model: Bitcoin Solaris. This blockchain is built with a dual-layer architecture and an integrated hybrid consensus model, delivering Ethereum-level programmability and Solana-level performance without the need for external rollups. Bitcoin Solaris boasts native 10,000 transactions per second (TPS), 2-second finality, and a high-efficiency mining system that can operate on smartphones. This has caught the attention of Polygon developers, with some even calling it “the technical breakthrough of 2025.”

Bitcoin Solaris differs from Polygon in its approach to scaling. While Polygon scales Ethereum from the outside, Bitcoin Solaris scales from within. Its system consists of two layers: a Base Layer and a Solaris Layer. The Base Layer uses Proof-of-Stake (PoS) and Proof-of-Capacity (PoC) to manage core blockchain operations and security. The Solaris Layer, based on Solana technology, handles smart contracts and real-time decentralized applications (dApps) using Proof-of-History (PoH) and Proof-of-Time (PoT). Both layers are coordinated by the Helios Consensus Mechanism, which combines all four consensus methods for fast, energy-efficient validation and ordering. This results in finality in 2 seconds, horizontal scalability, and eliminates the need for rollups, bridges, or layer jumps.

Bridging between Ethereum and its Layer-2 solutions like Polygon often creates points of friction, including delays, higher gas fees, and challenges in verifying transactions across networks. Developers building on Polygon must also account for syncing issues, cross-layer logic, and eventual settlement to Ethereum’s mainnet. Bitcoin Solaris eliminates this complexity by integrating smart contracts and base-layer data within the same ecosystem, just on different operational layers. This means developers do not have to manage bridging logic, as assets are native, execution is instantaneous, and the blockchain itself handles consensus, ordering, and finality in one unified model.

One of Polygon’s strengths is its Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM) compatibility. However, the EVM’s limitations around speed and transaction sequencing persist even on Layer-2. Bitcoin Solaris addresses this by delivering its own Solana-compatible smart contract framework, allowing developers to deploy dApps using high-performance, modern tooling. With 10,000 TPS as a baseline and smart contracts processed through PoH-based sequencing, developers can launch apps that scale without bottlenecks or needing external accelerators.

Bitcoin Solaris has a fixed token supply of 21 million BTC-S tokens, mirroring Bitcoin’s hard cap. Unlike Bitcoin, which relies on fixed Proof-of-Work (PoW) distribution or dynamic burns, Bitcoin Solaris has allocated 4.2 million tokens (20%) to a public presale. The presale is currently in Phase 2, with tokens priced at 2 USDT. When this phase ends, the price increases to 3 USDT in Phase 3. There are no lockups, tiers, or hidden mechanics, ensuring a clean distribution in line with the project’s technical rollout. Bitcoin Solaris has also passed independent audits from top-tier firms and includes full identity verification, with all smart contract logic and consensus mechanisms being public and verifiable.

Polygon has significantly advanced Ethereum’s capabilities, but Bitcoin Solaris may be redefining how scaling is handled entirely. By embedding throughput, consensus, and mining directly into its core design, it removes the need for external layers, cross-chain tooling, and validator exclusivity. For developers seeking true scalability, fast execution, and user inclusion in one chain, Bitcoin Solaris presents a compelling next step.