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Agoric Raises $50M in CoinList Token Sale to Bring JavaScript Developers Into Crypto
Some 40,000 investors snatched up the BLD tokens in a mere two hours.

Agoric, a startup dedicated to creating JavaScript-based smart contracts, announced on Thursday it had sold over $50 million of its native BLD tokens in under two hours using the CoinList platform.
The public token sale, which took place on Dec. 29, 2021, added to a private sale that garnered some $32 million, announced at the time the Agoric proof-of-stake base layer went live in November 2021. Combined with an earlier seed round, the project has thus far raised over $85 million. The public sale of BLD staking tokens has also brought another 40,000 or so new account holders to the Agoric blockchain.
Read more: Smart Contract Platform Agoric Launches Public Chain
Agoric started out back in 2018 as a JavaScript-based smart contract coding language, designed to access the popular developer language while bringing a degree of battle-tested security to smart contracts.
Since then, it’s morphed into a proof-of-stake blockchain, linked to the Cosmos ecosystem, looking to create a safer decentralized finance (DeFi) realm than currently exists elsewhere.
Dev crunch
There are over 10 million developers who use JavaScript, which turns out to be easily made more secure than most other scripting languages. This is thanks to the clearly defined way to manage the authority a JavaScript program has, explained Agoric CEO Dean Tribble.
“We set out to build a platform where millions of developers could program this stuff, and so you’ve got to meet developers where they’re at,” Tribble said in an interview with CoinDesk. “And millions of developers on an everyday basis build software that controls trillions of dollars using JavaScript.”
Now that the Agoric consensus layer has been built with the Cosmos SDK blockchain framework, the next phase, which will go live in the next quarter or so, is fleshing out the economic applications layer, which will also include a “stable token” called Run, said Tribble.
This first phase of the application layer is just to get the economy deployed, stabilized and integrated with the whole Cosmos Inter-Blockchain Communication protocol, he said.
“Over time, there will be more phases,” Tribble said. “After the first launch, it will go into a permission phase, where people can propose, say, a core contract for NFTs that’s all written in JavaScript, and the community can vote on whether to deploy it. And that will run as we continue more security testing and running bug bounty programs, to eventually become permissionless. Then the gates are opened and anyone can deploy anything.”
Ian Allison
Ian Allison is a senior reporter at CoinDesk, focused on institutional and enterprise adoption of cryptocurrency and blockchain technology. Prior to that, he covered fintech for the International Business Times in London and Newsweek online. He won the State Street Data and Innovation journalist of the year award in 2017, and was runner up the following year. He also earned CoinDesk an honourable mention in the 2020 SABEW Best in Business awards. His November 2022 FTX scoop, which brought down the exchange and its boss Sam Bankman-Fried, won a Polk award, Loeb award and New York Press Club award. Ian graduated from the University of Edinburgh. He holds ETH.
