Naoris, Zec, And Cell Rally As Quantum-Resistant Narrative Heats Up
Naoris Protocol's $NAORIS surges 43.9% on the week as quantum-resistance becomes a tradable crypto theme, with $ZEC and $CELL also posting strong gains alongside Paradigm's PACTs proposal and growing developer activity around Bitcoin's post-quantum future.

Quantum computing has shifted from a distant theoretical risk to an active market catalyst. Three tokens with direct exposure to post-quantum cryptography — $NAORIS, $ZEC, and $CELL — are among the week's standout performers, with @NaorisProtocol's $NAORIS leading the pack at +43.9% on a market cap of roughly $72 million, $ZEC up 18.6% to $421, and $CELL adding 10.6%.
Naoris Protocol Mainnet Goes Live With NIST-Approved Encryption
The catalyst for $NAORIS is concrete. @NaorisProtocol launched its mainnet in April, making it what the project describes as the first Layer 1 blockchain built entirely on post-quantum cryptography. CoinDesk reported that the network is built using post-quantum cryptography and algorithms approved by the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology to protect accounts, transactions, and digital assets.
At the technical core, the mainnet runs on NIST's ML-DSA algorithm — the standardized version of CRYSTALS-Dilithium, published as FIPS 204 — for all transaction signatures. The protocol enforces what it calls an irreversible security transition: once a user adopts post-quantum keys, any subsequent transaction attempt using classical cryptography is automatically blocked.
The network had already processed over 106 million post-quantum transactions and mitigated more than 603 million security threats during its testnet phase before going live. Early access remains limited to an invite-only group of validator operators, with a phased expansion planned as the ecosystem matures.
The launch also carries institutional weight. Naoris was cited in a research submission to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission as the reference model for quantum-resistant blockchain infrastructure within the Post-Quantum Financial Infrastructure Framework (PQFIF).
Paradigm's PACTs Proposal Adds Protocol-Level Urgency
The broader quantum narrative is being reinforced at the Bitcoin level. On May 1, @paradigm researcher Dan Robinson published a proposal called Provable Address-Control Timestamps, or PACTs. The proposal aims to protect old Bitcoin wallets from future quantum-computing attacks without forcing their owners to move coins now, offering a privacy-preserving way to timestamp cryptographic proof of ownership.
The stakes are significant. Over 1.1 million BTC — worth roughly $75 billion — in Satoshi-linked wallets face exposure if cryptographically relevant quantum computers emerge. PACTs would allow holders to silently prove address control before such a scenario materialises, using existing Bitcoin infrastructure and requiring no on-chain transaction.
The proposal sits alongside a broader wave of developer activity, including BIP-361 from Jameson Lopp — which proposes a multi-year migration window for quantum-vulnerable addresses — and Google's research estimating that breaking Bitcoin's elliptic curve cryptography could require fewer than 500,000 qubits, far below previous estimates. Google's latest guidance sets a post-quantum cryptography migration target of 2029, a timeline that is pulling forward institutional and developer attention alike.
Taken together — a live post-quantum mainnet, a high-profile Bitcoin rescue proposal from a major venture firm, and tightening academic timelines — quantum resistance has crossed from speculative narrative into a theme with real on-chain and market traction.
Sources:
CoinDesk – Naoris Protocol's quantum-resistant blockchain goes live
Paradigm – PACTs: Protecting Your Bitcoin From a Quantum Sunset
Crypto.news – Naoris Launches First NIST-Approved Quantum-Resistant Mainnet
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Author
Jon studied Philosophy at the University of Cambridge and has been researching cryptocurrency full-time since 2019. He started his career managing channels and creating content for Coin Bureau, before transitioning to investment research for venture capital funds, specializing in early-stage crypto investments. Jon has served on the committee for the Blockchain Society at the University of Cambridge and has studied nearly all areas of the blockchain industry, from early stage investments and altcoins, through to the macroeconomic factors influencing the sector.


