A lot of Layer-1 networks promise speed, low fees, developer access, and some version of mass adoption. It can be difficult to verify those promises, especially in a market where users have heard similar pitches for years.
In an interview with BeInCrypto, Josip Heit, Senior Strategy Advisor at Apertum Holding Ltd., the company behind Apertum Blockchain, shared how the project is trying to turn that promise into something more concrete.
Avalanche-based, EVM-compatible Apertum is one project that points to simpler onboarding, easier smart contract deployment, and a network built to serve both developers and less technical users. The company also has a growing DEX presence, along with recently added fiat on-ramp support for APTM through Alchemy Pay.
Josip said the original goal was to make blockchain participation easier to access and easier to use.
Let’s take a closer look.
A growth story
Apertum points to a set of early network numbers: roughly 500,000 addresses, more than 16,600 smart contracts, and around 11 million transactions.
The figures suggest momentum, but like any early-stage chain data, they need context. High wallet counts and transaction totals can point to real traction, but they can also be inflated by bursts of activity, concentrated usage, or incentive-driven behavior.
The team argues that the better test is whether usage is tied to live products and active participation across the ecosystem.
Still, the real benchmark over the next phase will be whether activity stays broad-based and consistent rather than clustering around a narrow set of uses.
Why Apertum thinks another EVM chain can still stand out
We asked Josip how it separates itself from the long list of “fast and compatible” chains already in the market. The answer was by giving builders familiar tooling with fewer barriers at the entry point.
Ultimately, a chain stands out less by raw speed claims and more by how easy it is to build on, access, and trust over time.
Web3 still has a usability problem
The market still has an adoption problem, and much of it comes down to uneven tooling, inconsistent user experience, and the difficulty of turning technical capacity into mainstream behavior.
“Web3 is still in its early adoption phase. Infrastructure is uneven, and global instability has slowed adoption, but this is temporary. Governments are already competing to lead in this industry. The foundation is being laid for the next wave of adoption, and Apertum is ready to support this transition.”
Usability sits above many of Web3’s other familiar problems, including regulatory uncertainty, fragmented ecosystems, lingering trust issues, and a market that has too often been driven more by speculation than sustained everyday use.
Avalanche gives Apertum the base, but access may decide the next phase
Apertum sees the network’s performance profile and community depth as an anchor for its own growth.
But infrastructure alone rarely changes adoption curves. Add in access, however, and it might. That is where the March 2026 Alchemy Pay integration becomes relevant.
Apertum framed that as part of a wider push to widen the entry point for both users and developers.
The next year is the decider
Apertum is taking the usual Layer-1 pitch and grounding it in usability through EVM compatibility, Avalanche-based performance, easier deployment, a live DEX, and wider fiat access.
Public market data already shows APTM trading with a live market cap in the low tens of millions of dollars.
If Apertum can convert early ecosystem growth into repeat usage, broader app activity, and a developer base that keeps building, it has a path to stand out. If not, it risks blending into the wider field of chains that promised adoption before they proved it.
The team says it is focused on the first outcome.
Apertum definitely has the early ingredients of a serious growth story.
The post Apertum Wants to Turn Web3 Usage Into Something More Practical appeared first on BeInCrypto.
Source: https://beincrypto.com/apertum-practical-web3-usage/






