In the compliant crypto ecosystem of 2026, most Layer1s are competing to increase speed, reduce costs, and improve TPS. However, Dusk Network has taken a completely different approach—implementing on-chain identity verification and turning it into an infrastructure-level feature.
The logic behind the Citadel protocol is actually quite straightforward: this is not a general-purpose tool but is specifically designed for assets with "identity tags." A Bitcoin on a public chain? Transfer it freely. But if your assets are tokenized bonds, fund shares, structured products under MiCA regulation, or involve KYC/AML verification, investor qualification checks... then Citadel shifts from an "optional" feature to a "necessity."
On the technical level, through zero-knowledge proofs (ZK-SNARKs), users can prove their identity attributes to smart contracts—such as "I am an EU resident," "I am not on a sanctions list," or "I possess a qualified investor certificate." Throughout this process, sensitive information like passports and IDs are never exposed to anyone, including contract developers.
This solves the old problem of traditional on-chain compliance: either privacy is compromised, or compliance checks rely on off-chain manual approval, which is inefficient. Now, both verifiability and privacy are achieved simultaneously.
Conversely, if in your project, the logic of "who can hold" is more important than "how to transfer," and compliance access must occur automatically, in real-time, and immutably on-chain, then Dusk's Citadel is currently one of the most mature solutions. Pure utility tokens or permissionless assets are indeed not suitable; but for truly institutional-grade RWAs, lacking this system almost means "incomplete compliance."
Is your project identity-agnostic or strongly identity-bound? Feel free to discuss how you prioritize Citadel in your RWA on-chain solution.
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PessimisticOracle
· 01-11 14:55
This is the true approach to building infrastructure, not just following the trend of competing over TPS. Identity binding is indeed a rigid requirement for institutional RWA, and there are few solutions that can meet both privacy and compliance simultaneously.
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VitalikFanAccount
· 01-11 14:50
Hey, ZK identity layer is really a way out, much more reliable than projects relying on manual approval
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Institutional-grade RWA definitely needs to make this standard, or else it always feels like something's missing
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This idea should have been implemented long ago, combining privacy and compliance together, brilliant
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The problem is, how many projects actually need this set? Most are still just hyping concepts
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Citadel's positioning is quite clear, either comprehensive or focused on solving the "identity linkage" pain point
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If the cost of ZK proofs can be reduced further, the adoption rate will be much higher
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Wait, are you saying KYC is required to participate? Then isn't that going back to the old path of traditional finance, what’s the point of Web3?
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In the RWA track, such things are indeed needed, but don’t turn it into another layer of scrutiny
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Gm_Gn_Merchant
· 01-11 14:48
This is the true infrastructure mindset, not just about stacking parameters. Institutions' RWA without this foundational identity are essentially just compliant "semi-finished products."
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MetaMasked
· 01-11 14:45
Institutional-level RWA truly needs to be taken seriously; privacy + compliance that meet both requirements are the real essentials. Dusk's approach is much more reliable than simply stacking TPS.
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ParanoiaKing
· 01-11 14:30
Finally, someone is doing something meaningful, not just piling up TPS. The Citadel logic is indeed a necessity for institutional-level RWA, and the idea of achieving both ZK proof privacy and compliance is quite good. However, I guess only a few projects will actually be able to use this technology, as most are still playing the permissionless game.
In the compliant crypto ecosystem of 2026, most Layer1s are competing to increase speed, reduce costs, and improve TPS. However, Dusk Network has taken a completely different approach—implementing on-chain identity verification and turning it into an infrastructure-level feature.
The logic behind the Citadel protocol is actually quite straightforward: this is not a general-purpose tool but is specifically designed for assets with "identity tags." A Bitcoin on a public chain? Transfer it freely. But if your assets are tokenized bonds, fund shares, structured products under MiCA regulation, or involve KYC/AML verification, investor qualification checks... then Citadel shifts from an "optional" feature to a "necessity."
On the technical level, through zero-knowledge proofs (ZK-SNARKs), users can prove their identity attributes to smart contracts—such as "I am an EU resident," "I am not on a sanctions list," or "I possess a qualified investor certificate." Throughout this process, sensitive information like passports and IDs are never exposed to anyone, including contract developers.
This solves the old problem of traditional on-chain compliance: either privacy is compromised, or compliance checks rely on off-chain manual approval, which is inefficient. Now, both verifiability and privacy are achieved simultaneously.
Conversely, if in your project, the logic of "who can hold" is more important than "how to transfer," and compliance access must occur automatically, in real-time, and immutably on-chain, then Dusk's Citadel is currently one of the most mature solutions. Pure utility tokens or permissionless assets are indeed not suitable; but for truly institutional-grade RWAs, lacking this system almost means "incomplete compliance."
Is your project identity-agnostic or strongly identity-bound? Feel free to discuss how you prioritize Citadel in your RWA on-chain solution.