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- NEAR vs Arbitrum Nova
NEAR vs Arbitrum Nova Scalability
Real-time TPS
NEAR TPS is 30.01 tx/s, while Arbitrum Nova has no data
Max TPS (100 blocks)
NEAR max TPS is 4,135 tx/s, while Arbitrum Nova has no data
Max Theoretical TPS
NEAR max theoretical TPS is 16,000 tx/s, while Arbitrum Nova has no data
Transaction Volume
NEAR transaction volume is 108,025 txns, while Arbitrum Nova has no data
Block Time
NEAR block time is 0.6s, while Arbitrum Nova has no data
Finality
NEAR finality is 0.6s, while Arbitrum Nova has no data
Type
NEAR is a layer 1 blockchain, while Arbitrum Nova has no data
Launch Date
NEAR was launched on Apr 22, 2020, while the Arbitrum Nova has no data
NEAR vs Arbitrum Nova Decentralization New
Nakamoto Coefficient
NEAR Nakamoto Coefficient is 10, while Arbitrum Nova has no data
Validators/Miners
NEAR has 320 validators, while Arbitrum Nova has no data
Stake/Hashrate
NEAR stake is $1.419B, while Arbitrum Nova has no data
Consensus Mechanism
NEAR is PoS, while Arbitrum Nova has no data
Governance
NEAR governance is council, while Arbitrum Nova has no data
Other Comparisons
NEAR Comparisons
About Blockchains
About NEAR
NEAR is the chain abstraction stack, empowering builders to create apps that scale to billions of users and across all blockchains.
About Arbitrum Nova
Arbitrum Nova is a high-performance alternative to Arbitrum One's chain. While Arbitrum One implements the purely trustless Rollup protocol, Arbitrum Nova implements the mostly trustless AnyTrust protocol. The key difference between Rollup and AnyTrust is that the AnyTrust protocol introduces an additional trust assumption in the form of a Data Availability Committee (DAC). This committee (detailed below) is responsible for expediting the process of storing, batching, and posting child chain transaction data to Ethereum's parent chain. This lets you use Arbitrum in scenarios that demand performance and affordability, while Arbitrum One is optimal for scenarios that demand Ethereum's pure trustlessness.