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What is Gensyn and Its New $AI Token?

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Gensyn went live with its $AI token on April 29, 2026, pairing decentralized AI compute with a buy-and-burn flywheel. Here is how it works.

Crypto Rich

May 4, 2026

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Gensyn is a decentralized infrastructure project that wants to loosen Big Tech's grip on AI compute, and $AI is the ERC-20 token that powers it. The network launched its mainnet on April 22, 2026, with its token going live on April 29 across exchanges including Binance, OKX, Kraken, Bitget, and Coinbase.

The token generation event is less than a week old. The first live application is already routing fee revenue into a buy-and-burn contract, and the project's verification stack is the unusual part of the pitch. Here is how the pieces fit together.

What does Gensyn actually do?

Most modern AI training runs on GPU clusters owned by a handful of cloud providers. Gensyn aims to route those workloads through a permissionless network of contributors instead, ranging from gaming PCs to smaller data centers, with phones added over time. The thesis from a16z crypto, which led the project's Series A, is that idle global compute could expand available machine learning capacity by 10 to 100 times if it can be coordinated trustlessly.

That last word is the hard part. If you do not trust the operator running the GPU, you need cryptographic proof that the work was done correctly. Gensyn's answer is a custom verification stack rather than the optimistic or zk approaches common elsewhere.

How does the network work?

Gensyn rests on three primitives plus a settlement chain.

AXL, the Agent eXchange Layer, is the peer-to-peer networking layer. Nodes swap weights, gradients, signals, and data directly with end-to-end encryption. No central server brokers the connection, which lets training swarms and agent coordination run without bottlenecks.

CHAIN handles on-chain identity. Every participant, whether a person, a model, or an autonomous agent, receives a persistent addressable identity. That identity anchors reputation, staking, and credentials across the network.

REE, the Reproducible Execution Environment, is the verification piece. It uses a custom MLIR-based compiler and what Gensyn calls RepOp kernels to make AI inference and training bitwise reproducible across different hardware. The output is a cryptographic proof that a computation ran exactly as specified. That proof is what allows a network of strangers to settle ML (Machine Learning) work without disputes.

Settlement runs on a custom EVM L2 rollup built on the OP Stack with Bedrock, where payments, staking, and slashing happen.

What is the $AI token used for?

$AI has four roles inside the network.

Verifiers stake $AI to validate ML work, with slashing for dishonest behavior. Compute tasks and ML services are paid for in the token. Governance is being phased in for protocol upgrades and treasury allocation. The fourth role is the one that ties the token to real activity.

On-chain revenue, starting with fees from the Delphi application, flows to a protocol-owned BuyBack Vault. The vault uses a 30-minute time-weighted average price on Uniswap to swap revenue into $AI, which is then split. Seventy percent is permanently burned. Twenty-nine percent goes to the Community Treasury for grants and incentives. One percent goes to whoever calls the contract that triggers the buyback, which keeps the mechanism permissionless. The vault went live with the token launch, and Delphi fees are already flowing into it. 

Total supply is fixed at 10 billion. The tokenomics break down as 40.4 percent to the Community Treasury, 29.6 percent to investors, 25 percent to the team, 3 percent to the community sale, and 2 percent to testnet rewards. The team and investor allocations carry a 12-month cliff followed by 24 months of linear unlocking, and those tokens cannot be staked during lockup. The treasury unlocked 20 percent at TGE with the rest streaming linearly over 36 months.

Trading data from CoinMarketCap shows $AI trading in the $0.034 to $0.045 range, with a market cap near $46 million and a circulating supply of around 1.3 billion. Volatility has been heavy, in line with other recent DePIN and AI launches.

What is Delphi?

Delphi is the first application to run on Gensyn and the source of those buyback fees. It is a permissionless prediction market that settles using AI oracles rather than human dispute resolution.

Anyone can spin up a market on any resolvable question, from crypto prices to sports outcomes to AI benchmark results. Humans and AI agents trade positions against each other. Markets resolve through verifiable AI oracles, which removes the dispute window that slows down rival platforms. Pricing is dynamic pari-mutuel with automatic liquidity.

The fee structure routes roughly 2 percent of trades, with 1.5 percent going to the market creator and 0.5 percent to the BuyBack Vault. Delphi launched on mainnet on April 22 after a testnet that processed millions in volume.

Who is behind it?

Gensyn was founded by Ben Fielding (@benfielding), who serves as CEO, and Harry Grieve (@harrygrieve). Backers include a16z crypto, CoinFund, Galaxy Digital, Eden Block, and Maven 11. Total raised stands at $66.74 million according to CryptoRank, with $50.60 million from private funding rounds and $16.14 million from the December 2025 public sale on Echo’s Sonar. The team is set to appear at Consensus 2026 in Miami, which runs from May 5 to 7.

What are the risks?

The case against $AI at this price is mostly about execution and timing. Verifiable compute at production scale has not been proven for any decentralized AI project, and Gensyn's REE design is technically ambitious. Competition in the AI DePIN sector is dense, with Bittensor, Render, Akash, and io.net all chasing variations of the same problem. Vesting unlocks for the team and investor tranches start arriving in roughly 12 months, and the regulatory picture for tokens that pay out from on-chain revenue remains unsettled.

The launch puts Gensyn in unusual company. The product is live, the fees are real, and the buyback is running. Most AI DePIN tokens are still selling the idea. 

For more information, visit gensyn.ai or follow @gensynai on X.


Sources:

  • Gensyn Official project website with infrastructure overview and team details
  • Gensyn Docs $AI token specification, allocation breakdown, vesting schedule, and BuyBack Vault mechanics
  • Delphi Live prediction market application running on Gensyn mainnet
  • CryptoRank Fundraising data showing $66.74M total across public sale and private rounds
  • CoinMarketCap Live $AI trading data, market cap, and circulating supply

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Gensyn?

Gensyn is a decentralized infrastructure protocol for AI training, inference, and information markets. It connects idle global compute through cryptographic verification so AI workloads can run without centralized cloud providers.

What is the $AI token used for?

$AI is the network's native ERC-20 token. It is used for staking by ML verifiers, payments for compute and services, governance, and capturing on-chain revenue through a protocol-owned buy-and-burn vault.

When did $AI launch?

The token generation event was on April 29, 2026, with listings on Binance, OKX, Kraken, Bitget, and Coinbase. Gensyn mainnet went live a week earlier on April 22.

Disclaimer

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article do not necessarily represent the views of BSCN. The information provided in this article is for educational and entertainment purposes only and should not be construed as investment advice, or advice of any kind. BSCN assumes no responsibility for any investment decisions made based on the information provided in this article. If you believe that the article should be amended, please reach out to the BSCN team by emailing [email protected].

Author

Crypto Rich profile photoCrypto Rich

Rich has been researching cryptocurrency and blockchain technology for eight years and has served as a senior analyst at BSCN since its founding in 2020. He focuses on fundamental analysis of early-stage crypto projects and tokens and has published in-depth research reports on over 200 emerging protocols. Rich also writes about broader technology and scientific trends and maintains active involvement in the crypto community through X/Twitter Spaces, and leading industry events.

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