In crypto, a mainnet is a sovereign, functional blockchain that executes actual transactions with real-world economic value. It is the “live” version of a protocol. 

Unlike a testnet, which acts as a zero-risk sandbox for developers to break code, the mainnet is where the stakes are permanent. If a transaction happens here, it stays on a public ledger forever.

Most projects start their lives as placeholder tokens on an existing network, typically as ERC-20 contracts on Ethereum. The shift to mainnet is the moment of truth. 

Once the genesis block is live, the network must defend against real exploits. A project’s Fully Diluted Valuation (FDV) is no longer based on a roadmap; it is now priced against actual performance, security, and hardware requirements.

Join our newsletter

For investors, a mainnet launch is the ultimate “de-risking” event, yet it often functions as a brutal “sell the news” trap. Early buyers who participated in seed rounds or testnet incentives frequently use the mainnet hype as exit liquidity to dump their positions on retail traders.

Post-launch, the focus shifts to on-chain metrics like Total Value Locked (TVL) and developer activity. A mainnet without users is just a ghost town with a high market cap. It is the transition from a speculative “what if” to a verifiable, decentralized economy.

Disclaimer: Coin Medium is not responsible for any losses or damages resulting from reliance on any content, products, or services mentioned in our articles or content belonging to the Coin Medium brand, including but not limited to its social media, newsletters, or posts related to Coin Medium team members.

Related Terms

Merkle tree

A Merkle tree, a cornerstone of blockchain technology, serves as a cryptographic data structure. Its purpose? To facilitate secure and efficient verification of extensive data collections. This system enables users to verify thousands of transactions using a single hash, thereby maintaining security. The structure itself has its roots in the late 1970s, thanks to computer scientist Ralph Merkle, who originally designed it as a way to confirm data integrity. Merkle trees work by hashing data in pairs. This process involves

Stop loss

The stop loss order works as a trading instrument which protects against losses because it sells an asset when its price hits a set market value. Traders establish stop loss orders in cryptocurrency markets to reduce their financial exposure which arises during market price fluctuations. The order executes when the defined market price point is reached which helps decrease the risk of further market losses. A trader who purchases Bitcoin at $30000 and creates a stop loss at $27000 loses

Total Value Locked

Total Value Locked, commonly known as TVL, is a widely used metric in decentralized finance that measures the total value of digital assets deposited in a protocol or across an entire blockchain ecosystem. The metric shows total capital which users have dedicated to smart contracts which enable them to perform lending activities and borrowing activities and staking activities and liquidity provision activities and yield farming activities. TVL measures the total amount of funds which users have currently locked inside decentralized