Paradigm's Tempo Project Launches Testnet, Is It Worth Checking Out?
Original Title: "Paradigm's Brainchild Tempo Launches Testnet, Will This Time See 'Big Hair'?"
Original Author: Nicky, Foresight News
Tempo is a new Layer 1 blockchain developed through a collaboration between the fintech company Stripe and the crypto venture capital firm Paradigm. Its core focus is to provide dedicated infrastructure for large-scale payment scenarios. The project opened its public testnet in December of this year and is planned to launch its mainnet in 2026.
Tempo is not a general-purpose smart contract platform; its design is consistently optimized around the core scenario of "payments," aiming to address the high cost and inefficiency issues faced by existing blockchains in supporting stablecoin and other payment applications.
Tempo is fully compatible with the Ethereum Virtual Machine, meaning developers can seamlessly migrate existing Ethereum tools and applications. One of its core innovations is the introduction of a native token standard called "TIP-20," designed specifically for stablecoins and payment tokens, serving as the foundation for network fees, payment channels, and other functions.
Unlike most public chains, Tempo does not have a native token. Network transaction fees (including gas fees) can be paid directly in stablecoins, provided that the stablecoin is natively issued in the TIP-20 standard and has sufficient liquidity in the on-chain fee AMM. The network has set a fixed base fee rate, unlike the dynamic model used by Ethereum's EIP-1559, aiming to keep the cost of a TIP-20 transfer below $0.001 and allocating the fees directly to block validators.
One of Tempo's core innovations is its native Tempo Transactions transaction type. This design introduces batch transactions, concurrent execution, fee delegation, scheduled payments, and modern identity authentication mechanisms based on Passkeys (such as biometrics), all centered around real payment needs. These features are designed to support on-chain scenarios like salary payments, subscription deductions, and enterprise-level bulk payments, while reducing complexity for applications in terms of user experience and operations. The block's final confirmation time is approximately 0.6 seconds, providing deterministic settlement assurance for payments.
In mid-October 2025, Tempo completed a $500 million Series A funding round with a post-investment valuation of around $5 billion. This round was led by Greenoaks and Thrive Capital, with participation from institutions such as Sequoia Capital, Ribbit Capital, and SV Angel. Neither Stripe nor Paradigm themselves appeared on the list of investors.
In terms of ecosystem development, in September, Tempo announced its first batch of infrastructure partners, covering wallets, fiat on/off ramps, compliance, development tools, interoperability, and stablecoin-related services. Participants include MetaMask, Phantom, and others. In December, the team further revealed that its partner network has expanded to include multiple financial institutions and large enterprises, such as Visa, Mastercard, Deutsche Bank, Standard Chartered Bank, UBS, Shopify, and some tech companies.
During the same month, Swedish fintech company Klarna launched its stablecoin KlarnaUSD and chose to go live on Tempo, becoming an early example of the chain's use in a payment scenario.
The Tempo team currently consists of around 15 people, operating independently but with support in resources and ecosystem from Stripe and Paradigm. The project is led by Paradigm's co-founder and managing partner Matt Huang, who also serves on Stripe's board of directors. Public information indicates that Matt Huang will take on the role of Tempo's first CEO while continuing his role at Paradigm.
Key members of the core engineering team mainly come from the Ethereum scaling and infrastructure space. For instance, Liam Horne, who previously served as co-founder and CEO of Optimism, is involved in Tempo's core development; Paradigm CTO Georgios Konstantopoulos oversees the engineering direction, drawing on his past experiences at Reth, Foundry, and in Ethereum clients and development tools to underpin Tempo's underlying implementation. On the market and partnership front, Simon Taylor, with a long history in fintech consulting and entrepreneurship, is driving initiatives forward.
Regular users can experience the Tempo testnet through the following steps:
· First, the Tempo testnet needs to be added to compatible wallets like MetaMask, with network information available through its official documentation.
· Next, users can claim free test stablecoins from the testnet faucet to cover transaction fees for subsequent transactions.
· After acquiring test coins, users can engage in a series of core interactions, such as sending an on-chain transaction on a specific website, deploying a simple smart contract using tools like Remix, or minting an NFT on the testnet. Additionally, they can register test domain names or participate in tasks offered by third-party platforms to deepen interaction.
Meanwhile, users can also build network nodes and participate in the network through the official documentation tutorial.
Tempo has not yet launched its mainnet, and the official estimated mainnet launch time is in 2026. The current testnet supports basic EVM functionality and has launched payment channels, a stablecoin gas mechanism, and decentralized trading components.

At the application layer, Tempo's testnet has seen the first NFT project. The Momo series released by the artist Lola is considered the first NFT collection on Tempo. This project, featuring a retro animation style, is scheduled to unfold gradually by 2026.
Despite Tempo attracting significant attention from traditional finance and crypto capital, its development path is not without controversy. Christian Catalini, who was involved in the design of the Meta stablecoin project Libra, has publicly expressed skepticism about enterprise-driven blockchain models. He believes that projects like Tempo face a core issue not in technology but in incentive and competitive structures. Once a de facto monopoly is established, the openness and permissionless nature of the network may be weakened.
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