• Burnt, the team behind the XION blockchain, has unveiled its APAC Initiative to accelerate adoption across the Asia-Pacific region.
  • The initiative focuses on real-world Web3 use cases and is backed by strong regional partnerships, developer support programs, and seamless consumer onboarding.

Burnt, the innovation-driven team responsible for the XION blockchain, has officially announced the launch of its APAC Initiative—a strategic effort aimed at accelerating the adoption and ecosystem growth of XION across the Asia-Pacific region.

The initiative, revealed by Burnt’s founder Anthony Anzalone during a televised interview on Maeil Business News TV, highlights the company’s commitment to establishing a prominent presence in one of the world’s fastest-growing markets for digital assets and blockchain technology.

The APAC Initiative is poised to leverage XION’s key strengths as a layer-1 blockchain engineered for mainstream consumer use.

It offers a walletless experience and facilitates seamless payments through native USDC stablecoin integration, features that underscore XION’s mission to make Web3 accessible to the masses and drive real-world use cases.

The launch comes at a time when Asian markets are leading in blockchain innovation and widespread digital asset adoption, creating fertile ground for XION’s ecosystem to thrive.

Burnt’s expansion into the Asia-Pacific region is complemented by its growing network of partners, which spans payment solutions, on-chain membership protocols, and robust developer support programs.

These partnerships support the platform’s objective of lowering barriers to entry and fostering a thriving developer and user community.

With strong financial backing and a trajectory of rapid product development, Burnt’s APAC Initiative is expected to catalyse new opportunities for regional developers, businesses, and consumers.

The move signals Burnt’s commitment to building a user-centric blockchain infrastructure, shaping a more inclusive, culturally relevant, and accessible Web3 environment across the Asia-Pacific region.


Edited by Annette George