Sei: The Fastest Layer 1 for Trading

Authors Sei Labs
Year 2022
Project Sei Network
License Apache-2.0
Official Source https://github.com/sei-protocol/sei-chain/blob/main/whitepaper/sei_whitepaper.md

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Sei is a Cosmos SDK blockchain described in a 2022 whitepaper by Sei Labs, purpose-built for trading applications. Sei’s thesis: general-purpose blockchains are overbuilt for most use cases but specifically underbuilt for trading — trading applications need sub-second finality, high throughput, and trading-specific protocol primitives that general chains do not provide.

Two core technical contributions:

  1. Twin-Turbo Consensus: Combines optimistic block processing (nodes speculatively execute before consensus finishes) with intelligent block propagation (transactions are pre-shared among validators before block proposal, reducing redundant data transfer)
  1. Native On-Chain CLOB: A built-in order book matching engine at the protocol layer, available to any contract without reimplementation

A later upgrade (Sei v2) added parallelized EVM execution with optimistic parallelism — marking Sei as one of the first chains to offer parallel EVM alongside full EVM compatibility.

> Whitepaper: github.com/sei-protocol/sei-chain/blob/main/whitepaper/sei_whitepaper.md


Publication and Context

Sei Labs was founded in 2022 by Jeff Feng and Jayendra Jog. The project raised $35M in its Series A (August 2022) led by Multicoin Capital and Jump Crypto. Sei mainnet (v1) launched September 2023.

By 2022, the Cosmos ecosystem had established IBC as a viable cross-chain standard, and Osmosis had proven that specialized Cosmos SDK appchains could build productive DeFi ecosystems. Sei targeted the next specialization: an appchain optimized not just for a specific DeFi application but for the entire trading primitive set (order books, matching, clearing).

The Injective whitepaper (2020) had similar goals; Sei differentiated through the consensus performance focus (twin-turbo) and later EVM compatibility (Sei v2 targeting Ethereum developers).


Twin-Turbo Consensus

Component 1: Optimistic Block Processing (OBP)

Standard Tendermint BFT:

  1. Proposer broadcasts block proposal
  2. Validators receive block → execute transactions → vote
  3. Wait for 2/3+1 votes → finalize

With OBP: Validators begin executing transactions as soon as they receive the block proposal, before consensus is reached. Since ≥95% of proposed blocks are valid (proposer has been selected by honest consensus), this speculation is rarely wrong. The result: consensus time and execution time overlap rather than being sequential.

This is similar to how CPUs use branch prediction — speculatively execute the likely path and only roll back on misprediction.

Component 2: Intelligent Block Propagation (IBP)

Standard Tendermint: the block proposer sends the full block (including all transaction data) to all validators. For high-TPS chains, this data transfer becomes a bottleneck.

With IBP: Before the block round begins, validators pre-share transactions via gossip. When the proposer proposes a block, they only send transaction hashes (not full data) in the proposal message. Validators already have the full transactions from prior gossip, so they can reconstruct the block without re-downloading data.

Combined: twin-turbo consensus targets <400 millisecond end-to-end block time (receive tx → finalize) on Sei v1.


Native CLOB Protocol Primitive

Sei includes a built-in on-chain CLOB at the module level:

  • Any smart contract can place orders into the protocol’s order book via a CosmWasm interface
  • Orders are matched by the protocol at the end of each block (batch clearing, similar to Injective FBA)
  • Contracts build DeFi products (perpetuals, spot, options) using the protocol CLOB rather than implementing matching logic themselves

Difference from Injective: Injective’s CLOB is core to the chain’s primary use case (exchange). Sei’s CLOB is a library primitive that any contract can optionally use — the chain hosts general DeFi, not just exchange operations.


Sei v2: Parallelized EVM

Sei v2 (2024) introduced two major upgrades:

Full EVM Compatibility

Optimistic Parallelism

  1. Execute all transactions in a block simultaneously in parallel threads
  2. After execution, check for state conflicts (two txs reading/writing the same account)
  3. Re-execute conflicting transactions serially

For most DeFi workloads, most transactions are independent (touch different accounts/contracts) and never conflict — they execute fully in parallel. Only a small fraction require serial re-execution.

This is similar to Solana’s Sealevel and Aptos’s Block-STM but applied to EVM bytecode, which requires additional complexity because EVM does not natively declare access lists.


Key Technical Properties

Property Value
Consensus Tendermint BFT + Twin-Turbo
Block time <400ms (target)
Native CLOB Yes (batch-matched per block)
EVM compatible Yes (Sei v2)
Parallel execution Yes (optimistic parallelism, Sei v2)
Smart contracts CosmWasm (Rust) + EVM (Solidity)
Token SEI
Mainnet September 2023 (v1); v2 2024

Reality Check

Sei’s twin-turbo consensus achieved genuine performance improvements over standard Tendermint. The parallel EVM is a meaningful technical addition when deployed.

Challenges:

  • DeFi ecosystem size: Sei’s DeFi ecosystem launched smaller than anticipated. Major trading apps did not prioritize Sei deployment, limiting the “fastest L1 for trading” narrative.
  • EVM competition: By the time Sei v2 launched with EVM compatibility, it competed with Base, Arbitrum, Optimism, and dozens of other EVM environments with far larger existing ecosystems. Being a new EVM L1 is increasingly difficult.
  • SEI token performance: SEI price performance after main listing was weak relative to other Cosmos ecosystem tokens.
  • Twin-turbo in practice: Benchmarked performance in production conditions was lower than theoretical targets; real-world block times varied with network load.

Legacy

Sei is an important data point for the specialized appchain thesis. It demonstrated that Cosmos SDK chains can achieve sub-second finality with consensus-layer optimizations. The twin-turbo design influenced thinking about how to improve Tendermint performance without replacing the consensus algorithm entirely. Sei v2’s parallel EVM is a production reference implementation for EVM parallelization.


Related Terms


Research

  • Sei Labs. (2022). Sei: The Fastest Layer 1 for Trading. github.com/sei-protocol.

— Primary whitepaper; describes twin-turbo consensus, native CLOB, and the trading-optimized appchain design philosophy.

  • Buchman, E. (2016). Tendermint: Byzantine Fault Tolerance in the Age of Blockchains. MSc Thesis, University of Guelph.

— Tendermint BFT specification that Sei builds on; understanding Tendermint is prerequisite to understanding twin-turbo’s optimizations.

  • Gelashvili, R., Spiegelman, A., Xiang, Z., Danezis, G., Li, Z., Malkhi, D., Xia, Y., & Zhou, R. (2022). Block-STM: Scaling Blockchain Execution by Turning Ordering Curse to a Performance Blessing. PPoPP 2023.

— Block-STM parallel execution (from Aptos); Sei v2’s optimistic parallelism is related in design and serves as benchmarking context.