Unadulterated universal resource |
the corrective restructure to false decentralization.

There are certain criteria to be met for a blockchain to be truly decentralized–yet most blockchains today fall short.
The word “decentralization” has been used so much that people no longer bat an eye when it’s used incorrectly, even when the misuse is deliberate.
It’s survival adaptation: certain players want the world to remain under the false notion that they are part of the solution–to a problem that they play a large part in perpetuating.
Through this framing, they are able to negotiate and control the architectures of technology behind closed doors in a way that sneaks them back into a system designed to remove them. After all, blockchain technology is a solution conceived to wipe them out.
As a result, multi-layer blockchains push users to go through layers owned by private entities, all stored in databases somewhere. This rent-seeking system that has dominated the industry defeats the whole purpose of blockchains in the first place.
A Layer 1 blockchain that requires a Layer 2 is not a full financial system in itself without the supporting layers. Imagine taking a car only to be told that it has neither the capacity nor the speed required to take you anywhere, and it would require you to add another motor and a cart behind it for it to function as a single car.
And all of these additions to the Frankencar cost you a little bit more every time you use it, the proceeds of which go to those who own these additional components–which are not optional.
As the world gambled on cryptocurrencies and memecoins, switching between raving and crying as the market spiked and dropped, the primary reasons why the concept of blockchain was created at all were lost in the rubble.
There is a place for centralization, trust, and profit-making, but not in the mint function of a blockchain. The concept of blockchain was never meant to be a business in itself–Bitcoin was conceived as a solution to prevent control over, or abuse of, money printing, and to provide an honest, tamper-proof currency that serves its purpose as a highway through which free trade and business can be conducted.
Gajumaru was created to bring blockchain back to its core principles. It needs no other layers to support itself–unlike systems that require a Layer 1, Layer 2, and sometimes even a Layer 0.
The Gajumaru root, or “Groot,” is an uncontrolled, universal resource with no operator. It is a resource layer meant to be freely used by anyone, anywhere without intermediaries.
And as a universal resource layer, it must remain immutable, and truly decentralized–untainted by the influence of a faceless few hiding behind a million wallet addresses. It will not be controlled by anyone, no matter how much currency they hold, unlike Ethereum’s anonymous proof-of-stake. It is for this reason that hard forks on Groot beyond the completion of the whitelist period are practically impossible.
Groot is a distributed blockchain that uses a proof-of-work (PoW) consensus mechanism acting as a system-wide currency mint and registrar. Its sole purpose is to mint, circulate, and record. Nothing else. No one can influence or control it–not even those who created it. Simple, straight-forward, transparent. The Gajumaru blockchain remains a silent, neutral witness facilitating transactions without prejudice. Groot is a resource layer–and that’s all it will ever be.
Anyone who wants to use Groot directly can do so without needing the services or permission of any other entity. Any services, products, platforms built on Groot can be used by anyone–but only if they choose to do so.
Using this resource layer, anyone can build their own infrastructure or “associate chains.” These local markets enable economic activity–as well as competition–allowing users and businesses to transact based on reputation and preference, not because they have no choice.
It is a system refined in a way that does not demand massive resources to run–this low barrier-to-entry ensures that even mining is as inclusive, sustainable, and decentralized as possible, requiring hardware mediocre enough for everyday folk.
It is designed to mitigate mining monopolies, an aspect that has become questionable in Bitcoin where 80% of all blocks are mined under three addresses.
Over the past decade, the industry echoed market positioning of “store of value tokens”–it is a PR tactic. When the value of a coin becomes the core–or only–business case, control over mining becomes a battle. And it’s usually a competition most beneficial to those with massive funds for the fight.
Unlike most tokens in existence, the currency, Gaju, is meant to be spent. This isn’t to say HODLing can be prevented. But the primary reason for HODLing is because there is no practical real-world use for most tokens in existence at the moment without having to go through intermediaries such as trading platforms or even banks.
The Gajumaru ecosystem has lined up an arsenal of tools to ensure that everything a user needs to spend, receive, and circulate gajus would be accessible to those who need it, without losing even more of their hard-earned funds to middlemen.
If you want to take part in this movement, you’re still on time for early access.