- Compare
- N1 vs Flow
N1 vs Flow Scalability
Real-time TPS
N1 has no data, while Flow TPS is 7.78 tx/s
Max TPS (100 blocks)
N1 has no data, while Flow max TPS is 134.9 tx/s
Max Theoretical TPS
N1 has no data, while Flow max theoretical TPS is 3,900 tx/s
Transaction Volume
N1 has no data, while Flow transaction volume is 28,012 txns
Block Time
N1 has no data, while Flow block time is 0.82s
Finality
N1 has no data, while Flow finality is 10s
Type
N1 has no data, while Flow is a layer 1 blockchain
Launch Date
N1 has no data, while Flow was launched on Jul 15, 2020
N1 vs Flow Decentralization New
Nakamoto Coefficient
N1 has no data, while Flow Nakamoto Coefficient is 13
Validators/Miners
N1 has no data, while Flow has 271 validators
Stake/Hashrate
N1 has no data, while Flow stake is $251.5M
Consensus Mechanism
N1 has no data, while Flow is PoS
Governance
N1 has no data, while Flow governance is off-chain
Other Comparisons
N1 Comparisons
About Blockchains
About N1
N1 is crypto at unrestricted scale: An L1 blockchain that feels like the new internet—ultra high throughput, sub-ms latency, congestion-free.
About Flow
Flow is a layer one blockchain designed from the ground up for consumer apps and the digital assets that power them. The network runs on a Proof of Stake consensus mechanism with a unique "multi-role" architecture that solves the blockchain trilemma, balancing scalability, efficiency, and cost.
FLOW ($FLOW) is the native utility token that is used for:
- Fees for processing transactions and storing data.
- Buying, selling, and trading assets on Flow
- Staking and delegating to secure the network
Flow tools include:
- Cadence, a purpose-built smart contract programming language designed for consumer-grade applications
- Full EVM equivalence, allowing anything from Ethereum to work on Flow
- Protocol-level account abstraction and mobile support for onboarding new users
- Cross-chain interoperability with the wider web3 ecosystem
- Developer hub with comprehensive documentation and tools