GroveX is an EVM-compatible blockchain ecosystem built around the GRX Chain, designed to support decentralized applications with a focus on low transaction fees, high throughput, and developer tooling. It also integrates a native token economy and exchange infrastructure that connects network usage with ecosystem operations. [1]
GroveX is a blockchain ecosystem centered around GRX Chain, an EVM-compatible network developed by GRXCHAIN Inc. to support decentralized applications and digital assets. The chain is designed to provide low-cost transactions, high throughput, and compatibility with existing Ethereum-based tools, allowing developers to deploy or migrate applications with minimal changes while operating within a scalable infrastructure.
The network uses a delegated proof-of-stake consensus model, where validators and delegators secure the system and earn rewards. It incorporates a fixed-supply token (GRX) used for transaction fees, staking, and governance participation. Its token model includes a burn mechanism tied to network activity, along with rewards distributed to participants. The ecosystem also supports pegged assets, such as stablecoins and major cryptocurrencies, to facilitate liquidity and cross-chain value transfer.
GroveX integrates its blockchain with an exchange environment, where GRX is used for platform-related fees and activities, linking on-chain usage with exchange operations. It also includes ecosystem support mechanisms such as funding programs, technical resources, and listing pathways aimed at enabling application development and network participation. [7] [8]
The GRX Chain Analytics Suite is a developer and ecosystem monitoring layer that provides visibility into dApp performance, smart contract activity, and user behavior on the GRX Chain. It aggregates on-chain explorer data, contract event streams, and API-based indexers to support analysis of network usage and application performance in near real time. The system provides dashboards and query tools for tracking transaction activity, including volumes, success and failure rates, contract-level execution patterns, and gas usage and cost efficiency across different functions. It also supports monitoring user engagement metrics, such as active wallets, retention, and behavioral funnels, as well as token and liquidity indicators, including holder distribution, transfer activity, and DeFi pool performance.
In addition, the suite includes tools for assessing network and application health through metrics such as block timing stability, pending transaction load, and validator participation, as well as security-related signals such as contract upgrades, administrative changes, and abnormal fund movements. Custom dashboards and alerting mechanisms allow teams to define thresholds and detect anomalies across performance, cost, liquidity, and security dimensions. [4]
The GRX Chain Project Management framework defines standardized practices for developing, deploying, and maintaining decentralized applications on the GRX ecosystem, with an emphasis on secure smart-contract lifecycles, operational transparency, and controlled upgradeability. It provides structured guidance for moving applications from design through deployment and ongoing maintenance using EVM-compatible tooling and reproducible development workflows. It outlines a full contract lifecycle that includes deterministic builds, pinned compiler versions, testing, and staged deployments on testnets before mainnet release, followed by verification on GRXscan and controlled upgrade processes using established proxy patterns and timelocked execution. Administrative control is designed around multi-signature systems and least-privilege roles, with sensitive operations such as upgrades, treasury movements, and parameter changes requiring multiple approvals and optional delay mechanisms for review.
The framework also includes operational monitoring and cost management practices, tracking metrics such as transaction success rates, gas usage, contract performance, and user activity to support ongoing optimization and reliability. Security and governance are reinforced through alerting systems for abnormal behavior, structured treasury transparency via labeled addresses and documented flows, and auditability of funding and protocol changes through publicly referenced governance records. [9]
The GRX Chain Collaboration Tools define the ecosystem’s communication, development, and governance structure, providing standardized channels for coordination between developers, validators, users, and contributors. It organizes interaction across official communication platforms, developer forums, open-source repositories, and governance systems to support ecosystem participation and operational transparency. It includes defined official channels for announcements, community discussion, staking, and support, along with security guidelines that emphasize phishing resistance and protection against impersonation or fraudulent requests. Developer collaboration is supported through forums, issue tracking, and contribution workflows covering proposal submission, code review, testing, and merge processes, alongside structured templates for bugs, features, and security reports.
Governance is managed through a staged proposal lifecycle that moves from ideation and discussion to formal on-chain voting and implementation, with eligibility tied to network participation roles. Community support mechanisms include grant programs, office hours, validator coordination, and contributor recognition systems, alongside public documentation and versioned knowledge resources designed to enable consistent participation and knowledge sharing across the ecosystem. [10]
GRX Chain’s Security and Privacy framework defines a layered approach to protecting the network, combining economic incentives, cryptographic standards, and operational controls within a delegated proof-of-stake system. Validators are incentivized to behave correctly through rewards and slashing mechanisms, while transaction integrity and state consistency are maintained through established cryptographic primitives. Smart-contract safety is supported through recommended practices such as audits, testnet deployment, reproducible builds, strict role separation, multi-signature controls, timelocks, and controlled upgrade processes.
Operational security is reinforced through hardened node configurations, segmented infrastructure, monitored RPC endpoints, and structured incident response procedures with defined severity levels and post-incident reporting. Privacy is based on the transparency of public blockchain systems, where data is visible on-chain while users retain custody of their private keys and pseudonymous identities. Off-chain data handling is the responsibility of individual applications, with additional emphasis on supply-chain security, third-party risk management, and user protection against phishing, alongside ongoing exploration of privacy-enhancing technologies such as zero-knowledge systems. [2]
GRX is the native token of the GRX Chain ecosystem and is used as the primary unit for paying transaction fees on the network. It also serves as the staking asset for validators and delegators, who secure the delegated proof-of-stake system and receive rewards for validating the network. Beyond its role in network operations, GRX is used in on-chain governance, where token holders can vote on protocol proposals and system parameters. The tokenomics model includes a deflationary burn mechanism intended to reduce supply over time, while also integrating GRX into the ecosystem and exchange activity, where it is used for listing fees and platform-related payments. [5] [6]
GRX has a total supply of 10M tokens and has the following allocation: [5]