Graphite Network’s $@G Coin Lists on BitMart Just as the L1 Sector Heats Up

Graphite Network’s $@G Coin Lists on BitMart Just as the L1 Sector Heats Up

The post Graphite Network’s $@G Coin Lists on BitMart Just as the L1 Sector Heats Up appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.

This Thursday, July 24, Graphite Network’s native coin $@G is about to get officially listed on BitMart, a global centralized exchange with a substantial footprint: the platform supports over 9 million users worldwide. BitMart’s trading volumes are consistently in the multiple‑billion‑dollar range each day—CoinGecko reports around $2.6 billion in 24‑hour volume, and other data sources report $1.3 billion in just BTC/USDT trading alone The listing is a clear next step based on Graphite Network’s prior roadmap achievements and its emphasis on deliberate expansion. As stated in its mid‑year update, the team has been “deliberate about how and when to expand into CEX territory,” favoring “stable, organic growth over short‑term hype”. Now, it enters this listing with momentum and strategic intent. By choosing BitMart not just as an exchange but as a long‑term strategic partner, Graphite Network team aims to deepen liquidity, widen access, and put $@G within reach of a significantly larger and more global audience. A Blockchain Built for Reputation, Compliance, and Practical Use Founded on a Proof-of-Authority (PoA) consensus mechanism called Polymer 2.0, Graphite Network focuses on trust, compliance, and utility-first applications. Its main mission is to bring verifiable reputation and decentralized identity to the core of Web3 and enable both individuals and platforms to interact with more confidence and less risk. While most L1s lean into performance benchmarks, Graphite Network prioritizes what happens after speed: building systems of accountability, minimizing friction in user onboarding, and reducing fraud to a minimum at the infrastructure level. Its unique features include: ZK-powered KYC (privacy-preserving compliance) A Trust Score system to rate on-chain behavior “One user, one account” policy to prevent multi-account abuse Income for both entry-point and validator nodes The Reputation Phonebook: Putting a Trust Score Behind…