The wallet is the storefront. The terminal is the doorway.
Every VXIR wallet becomes a network node the moment it's installed — origination, routing, and verification, running quietly in the background. Every POS terminal we ship is a node and a customer-facing screen that hands the next person their wallet with a tap.
Merchants don't buy hardware — they run it under contract. And the network spreads the way M-Pesa spread: person to person, counter to counter, into markets the banks never reached.
- 01Every terminal's customer screen offers the wallet — zero-cost user acquisition at the moment of purchase.
- 02Every new wallet is a new node — infrastructure that scales with adoption, not ahead of it.
- 03A referral bounty pays the referrer in their stablecoin of choice — and the payout itself routes through VXIR. The network dogfoods its own rails.
The infrastructure doesn't get built ahead of demand. It builds itself as demand arrives. That's not a feature of the product — it is the product.
Simple enough for a child. Invisible by design.
The mandate for the wallet is absolute: simple enough for a grade-school child to use. Every layer of compilation complexity — chain selection, gas resolution, calldata generation, settlement routing — happens out of sight.
The user expresses intent. VXIR compiles it. The chain executes it. They just bought something. They never touched a blockchain.
Amazon made warehouses, carriers, and customs invisible behind one button. VXIR does the same for on-chain commerce — except VXIR owns nothing, holds nothing, and custodies nothing. The assets stay with the user. The network is the only thing in the middle.