September 26, 2025 – The Quantum Fusion Network (ticker: QF), a new Ethereum-based project promising lightning-fast block times and parallel computing capabilities, has seen its market value tumble more than 70% since its January all-time high.
Launched with ambitious goals of combining the HVM2 parallel evaluator and the Bend programming language into a scalable blockchain ecosystem, QF attracted early attention in late 2024. The token surged to around $4.35 USD at the start of 2025, but it has since retreated to roughly $1.00–$1.05, according to data from CoinGecko and CoinMarketCap.
Daily trading volumes hover in the tens of thousands of dollars, leaving the token with thin liquidity compared to larger layer-1 competitors. The total supply is capped at 10 million QF, though questions remain around circulating availability, with some platforms reporting the full 10M in circulation while others show zero verified float.
QF markets itself as a next-generation blockchain designed for 0.1-second block times, fork-less upgrades, and high-throughput workloads, potentially targeting AI, scientific computation, and dApps requiring real-time performance. If successful, the project could carve out a niche in the increasingly competitive blockchain-compute sector.
However, the challenges ahead are significant. Delivering on such a technical vision requires both engineering breakthroughs and adoption from developers. With liquidity low and market sentiment cautious, investors will be watching closely for progress on a mainnet launch, ecosystem growth, and external audits before committing long-term.
For now, QF remains a high-risk, high-reward play — a project with intriguing potential but an uphill climb to prove itself in a crowded and volatile market.

