Kaspa was founded by Yonatan Sompolinsky, a computer scientist and cryptographic researcher at Harvard, who authored foundational research on the GHOST and SPECTRE protocols that influenced Ethereum's design. Kaspa launched in November 2021 with a fair launch — no pre-mine, no ICO, no VC allocation. All KAS was mined from genesis, giving it a credibility profile comparable to Bitcoin's original distribution model. The fair launch and no-VC approach has created a strong community around Kaspa.
Kaspa's core innovation is its BlockDAG (Directed Acyclic Graph) architecture, which allows multiple blocks to be created simultaneously rather than sequentially, achieving approximately 1-second block times while maintaining the security properties of proof-of-work. This solves the speed limitation of Bitcoin and classic PoW chains without switching to proof-of-stake. The GHOSTDAG protocol determines consensus across parallel blocks. KAS is primarily used as a medium of exchange and store of value — there are no smart contracts on Kaspa, limiting its DeFi utility.
KAS has approximately 27.4 billion tokens in circulation with a deflationary emission schedule. The emission rate halves approximately every year, creating a faster deflation profile than Bitcoin's 4-year halving. KAS has no maximum supply cap — the emission asymptotically approaches zero. The current market cap is approximately $924 million. KAS has no ATH comparative data showing it near-ATH, suggesting it is one of the better-performing PoW assets relative to its own history.
Kaspa competes in the PoW narrative space primarily with Bitcoin (the dominant PoW asset), Ethereum Classic (proof of smart contract PoW), and Litecoin. After Ethereum's switch to proof-of-stake in 2022, Kaspa positioned itself as the most technically advanced PoW blockchain for miners displaced from Ethereum. Its BlockDAG innovation gives it a genuine technical differentiator over Bitcoin's sequential block model.
No smart contracts means Kaspa cannot host DeFi, NFTs, or any on-chain applications — it is purely a store-of-value/payments PoW network. This significantly limits its addressable use case. Energy-intensive PoW mining will face increasing ESG scrutiny. The speculative nature of PoW narratives post-Ethereum Merge is uncertain — Bitcoin dominates the PoW store-of-value narrative, leaving limited space for alternatives.
PoW narratives experience a resurgence as proof-of-stake networks face regulatory scrutiny as securities, Kaspa's BlockDAG architecture attracts attention from Bitcoin-focused institutional investors as a technically superior PoW alternative, or smart contract functionality is added through a planned future upgrade.
Bitcoin continues to dominate PoW narratives entirely, Kaspa fails to add DeFi utility leaving it as a niche PoW network without broad adoption, or energy-intensive PoW faces regulatory restrictions in key markets.
We would become more positive if: Kaspa announces credible smart contract development plans, its hashrate grows significantly indicating miner conviction, or institutional interest in PoW alternatives to Bitcoin grows. We would become more cautious if: smart contract plans remain absent, or PoW narratives further consolidate around Bitcoin only.
Kaspa is one of the most technically interesting PoW blockchains to emerge since Bitcoin — its BlockDAG architecture genuinely solves the speed limitation of sequential PoW without compromising security. The fair launch model gives it strong community credibility. The fundamental limitation is the absence of smart contracts, which confines Kaspa to the store-of-value/payments use case where Bitcoin already dominates. A speculative position for PoW believers with specific conviction in BlockDAG innovation.