Rome Protocol, a next-gen interoperability and scalability layer that empowers existing ecosystems with the power of Solana, announces its integration with Agglayer co-developed by Polygon Labs. Together, this integration enables seamless, zero-knowledge-enhanced interoperability, allowing developers to build dApps that leverage Ethereum’s security and Solana’s performance—without the trade-offs of either network. This marks a major step toward a more fluid, interconnected blockchain ecosystem.
By integrating Agglayer’s Ethereum connectivity with Rome Protocol’s interoperability framework, developers gain a high-performance, low-latency solution that reaches Solana’s +4,800+ TPS with enhanced safety and reliability. This translates into more scalable, censorship-resistant applications, bridging Ethereum and Solana for smooth asset transfers and updates plus a more unified, interoperable blockchain ecosystem.
“Each blockchain ecosystem offers unique strengths, but true innovation comes from bridging these advantages,” said Anil Kumar, CEO and Co-Founder of Rome Protocol. “By integrating Rome Protocol with Agglayer, we’re enabling developers to harness Ethereum’s security and Solana’s speed without compromise. This seamless interoperability will drive decentralized technologies closer to mainstream adoption — delivering more scalable, secure, and user-friendly applications to market.”
By combining Rome’s Interop framework, Shared Sequencer, and EVM execution layer with Agglayer’s zk-powered network aggregation, developers gain:
- Frictionless cross-chain composability between Ethereum and Solana
- Scalable, high-performance applications that operate with low latency and high security
- Unified liquidity and seamless asset movement across multiple ecosystems
“This collaboration with Rome Protocol aims to connect Ethereum’s security with Solana’s speed, giving developers the best of both worlds,” said Marc Boiron, CEO of Polygon Labs. “This is a big step toward a truly seamless, high-performance blockchain ecosystem, one that works across all of Web3, not just within isolated networks.”
Learn more about Rome Protocol’s documentation and Agglayer and the Polygon CDK.