Web3's Gavin Wood Launches Kusama Network to Test Polkadot Protocol
The Web3 Foundation launched a live experimental version of the Polkadot network on Friday. Here's what Kusama will be testing.

Developers will soon be able to test applications on a live version of blockchain interoperability protocol Polkadot.
Kusama, an experimental and unaudited version of the $1.2 billion network, was launched on Friday at the tail-end of Berlin Blockchain Week.
As highlighted in a blog post by Polkadot creator Gavin Wood, it will be somewhere between one to four weeks before developers can begin tapping the full functionality of the network. Until at least 50 “well-backed” validators are operating on the network, transfers of KSM tokens between users will not be possible.
Wood explained in the post which actions are now live:
"Functionality that will be enabled is limited to usage of the Staking, Sessions and Claims modules; specifically, bonding, nominating and issuing an intention to become a validator, setting up one’s session keys and claiming KSMs will be supported."
Once fully functioning, the Kusama network is expected to act as the proving ground for some of the most bleeding-edge technology planned for the actual Polkadot network, which is tentatively expected for launch early next year.
Wood spent much of Berlin Blockchain Week explaining the goals of the project.
.@gavofyork talks about what can you do on Kusama?
— kusama (@kusamanetwork) August 18, 2019
• Grow your $KSM by participating in Kusama’s NPoS by validating and nominating validators.
• Participate in on-chain governance: propose/vote on referenda or become a council member.
•Experiment with parachains pic.twitter.com/3MMBsqWfq5
Already, one of the teams expected to build on Polkadot is planning to run its applications on Kusama in the coming weeks.
project lead Ingo Ruebe said:
“We want to be part of this ecosystem but we have the feeling that not everything from a conceptual point of view has been thought through to the end so there’s still questions.”
Running KILT’s “virtual structures” on Kusama will serve to answer many questions, Ruebe said, including the auctioning structure of Polkadot parachains.
Explaining Parathreads
Polkadot parachains are basically individual blockchains that rely on a central blockchain, called the relay chain for enhanced security and network interoperability.
“The auctioning mechanism means you have a fixed number of parachain slots and the relay chain can only process so many parachains per block,” Wood said in an interview with CoinDesk. “It’s like how bitcoin can only process so many transactions per block and ethereum so much gas per block.”
According to Wood, the upfront cost for developers to lease a parachain slot on the Polkadot relay chain “could be very expensive.”
“With parachains, it’s a long-term commitment. You deposit [DOTs] two years at a time. You have to deposit a fair amount of DOTs to get this lease. It’s a fairly heavy tax,” said Wood.
This is why the Kusama network will help test a new Polkadot innovation known as parathreads.
Parathreads, according to Wood, allow developers to deploy an application for a fixed fee and process one block on the network at a time. Calling it a “pay-as-you-go” model, Wood said many applications could benefit from this kind of flexibility.
“Kusama is a way to test Polkadot’s economic security before we launch... and if see some chaos, we welcome that.” - @jutta_steiner from @ParityTech at @web3summit. pic.twitter.com/KyMInJkbad
— kusama (@kusamanetwork) August 19, 2019
“A lot of use-cases really don’t need to be processing every single block,” said Wood. “At busy times they may want to process every block but at off-peak times, they want to process every five, 10 or 100 blocks.”
It’s precisely this kind of functionality that teams like KILT Protocol are eager to test out on Kusama.
Said Ruebe:
“We’re completely uncertain about the price of a parachain and it's not possible to make a business decision of being a parachain [or a parathread] if we don't know.”
Gavin Wood (second from right) speaks at Web3 Summit 2019, photo by Christine Kim for CoinDesk
More For You
Protocol Research: GoPlus Security

What to know:
- As of October 2025, GoPlus has generated $4.7M in total revenue across its product lines. The GoPlus App is the primary revenue driver, contributing $2.5M (approx. 53%), followed by the SafeToken Protocol at $1.7M.
- GoPlus Intelligence's Token Security API averaged 717 million monthly calls year-to-date in 2025 , with a peak of nearly 1 billion calls in February 2025. Total blockchain-level requests, including transaction simulations, averaged an additional 350 million per month.
- Since its January 2025 launch , the $GPS token has registered over $5B in total spot volume and $10B in derivatives volume in 2025. Monthly spot volume peaked in March 2025 at over $1.1B , while derivatives volume peaked the same month at over $4B.
More For You
Coinbase Sees Crypto Recovery Ahead as Liquidity Improves and Fed Rate Cut Odds Climb

The crypto exchange also took note of a so-called AI bubble that continues to go strong and a weaker U.S. dollar.
What to know:
- Coinbase Institutional is seeing a potential December recovery in crypto, citing improving liquidity and a shift in macroeconomic conditions that could favor risk assets like bitcoin.
- The firm's optimism is driven by rising odds of Federal Reserve rate cuts, with markets pricing in a 93% chance easing next week, and improving liquidity conditions.
- Several recent institutional developments, including Vanguard's crypto ETF policy reversal and Bank of America's greenlighting of crypto allocations, have contributed to bitcoin's rebound from recent lows.











