
Last week, most ethereans had never heard of RISC-V, let alone worked out how to pronounce it (for the record itโs โrisk-fiveโ). Now suddenly everyoneโs an expert on the blockchain instruction kit thatโs being touted as a replacement to the EVM โ and by no less than Vitalk himself. While some crypto figures have heaped praise on the Ethereum founder for belatedly seeing the light, others are surprised he didnโt convert sooner โ particularly given that RISC-Vโs capabilities have been well documented for years.
Describing the function of RISC-V is less than straight-forward, since itโs not technically a virtual machine like the EVM. Itโs been variously described as โinstruction set architectureโ and โhardware-level ISA for physical processors,โ neither of which sheds much light on what RISC-V actually does. So letโs express it in laymanโs terms: RISC-V make computer run better. There, that was easy.
As for whether Ethereum will indeed ditch the virtual machine thatโs got its name in it and switch to the rival RISC-V thatโs more synonymous with Polkadot remains to be seen. But for the record, the following blockchain projects were long RISC-V long before Vitalik latched on.
Cartesi
One of the first projects to have seen RISC-Vโs potential is Cartesi, the modular blockchain for performant dapps, all secured by rollups. It specified its chain to be powered by RISC-V from day one โ indeed the framework is cited 56 times in Cartesiโs original whitepaper. As its docs explain, โThe RISC-V ISA, on which Cartesi Machines are based, consists of a minimal 32-bit integer instruction set to which several extensions can be added.โ If thatโs a little too technical for you to parse, weโll stop there, since Cartesiโs explanation only gets more complex from there.
Besides, whatโs important isnโt so much the implementation as the foresight that Cartesiโs team had in identifying the need for a processor that was more scalable than the EVM. This might sound obvious now, in an age where Ethereum is stagnating and newer L1s such as Solana and Sui are racing ahead, but thatโs just hindsight talking. In 2018, the EVM could do no wrong in the eyes of most devs. Cartesi saw things differently, and itโs now been vindicated, regardless of whether or not Ethereum ultimately switches software.
Wanxiang Blockchain
As its name suggests, Wanxiang is a Chinese blockchain company and its team was one of the earliest to see the potential in RISC-V, having been touting the tech since 2021. In fact, Wanxiangโs technical team were so intrigued by the potential for RISC-Vโs implementation within a blockchain context that they founded an SIG (special interest group) to explore applications for it.
Together with partners LeapFive, StarFive, and SiFive, Wanxiang has put its brightest minds to the task of identifying how best to leverage RISC-Vโs ISA to create innovative blockchain solutions powered by open source technology. The Wanxiang team were particularly taken with RISC-Vโs ability to support a range of cryptographic algorithms and enable developers to create secure, trusted solutions.
Web3 Pi
If youโve never heard of Web3 Pi, donโt be ashamed โ most crypto users havenโt. Itโs a project dedicated to making it easier to run an Ethereum node on a Raspberry Pi. This might not be the stuff that web3 mass adoption is made of, but itโs an interesting exercise from an intellectual and technological perspective nonetheless โ especially when you discover that Web3 Pi has managed to run a fully synced Ethereum node on RISC-V.
This was achieved just over a month ago, and may have influenced Vitalik to go public with his thoughts on why Ethereum is ready to embrace the blockchain instruction set. Since this article canโt be closed out until RISC-V has been described a dozen different ways, incidentally, it should be noted that Web3 Pi refers to the tech as an โopen-standard Instruction Set Architecture (ISA).โ
Weโll leave the final word on RISC-V and its potential path to being integrated onto Ethereum mainnet to Vitalik: โA more radical approach from a protocol perspective is to convert existing EVM contracts into contracts that call an EVM interpreter contract written in RISC-V that runs their existing EVM code.โ For a developer community still coming to terms with Pectra and its umpteen delays, the prospect of running all existing dapps through a converter may be a tough gig to sell. But if anyone can do it, Vitalik can.
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