November 2025 DevvE Technical Progress Update

Hello DevvE Network community! We continue our monthly developer technical progress for November, which might signify the start of the holiday season for many, but for DevvE it represents month two of our full testnet rollout, and the buildout of more important infrastructure for our chain ahead of mainnet release.

November focused on strengthening core infrastructure, advancing the lending protocol, and increasing the stability and observability of the DevvE Testnet.

Testnet and Infrastructure

The DevvE Testnet remained stable, advancing through consistent block validation and continued network testing, with one exception earlier this week for a couple of hours.

This occurred due to a background service pointing to an image asset that wasn’t available; the service paused until we corrected the reference. This was not a security event, there was no data loss, and service was restored quickly.

Cloudwatch dashboards have been configured across staging and production environments to improve performance monitoring. Likewise, infrastructure management moved further toward infrastructure-as-code practices through expanded Terraform usage, increasing reliability and standardizing deployments.

In other words, instead of setting up servers and systems manually as was required at the start of our Testnet deployment, the team is now writing instructions in code so everything can be created the same way every time ready for Mainnet launch. This makes the system more reliable and much easier to manage.

Additional observability improvements were introduced, and the validator restart process was refined to enhance resilience. Planning also began for AWS infrastructure updates to support scalability and future release automation.

Lending Protocol Development

The lending protocol saw extensive front-end and back-end integration throughout November. Core functionality progressed across loan creation, payments, collateral management, liquidation, and health factor tracking. Extended borrowing and lending cache integration were tested and refined.

A comprehensive testing framework is under development to ensure protocol robustness, supported by ongoing work on a unified specification for lending and liquidity interactions.

CTS and Fraud/Theft/Loss

The Devv Ecosystem Platform expanded to include CTS (contingent transaction set) management tools, an important step toward enabling users to trade assets across the DevvE ecosystem. This is a key focus ahead of the release of DevvE native assets and before we begin to bridge assets to the DevvE Network.

Similarly, design specifications for fraud, theft, and loss protection were completed, with initial endpoint implementation scheduled for future development cycles.

Core Software and Development Operations

Preparation began for formal Devv-Core software releases, including merging outstanding pull requests and aligning features ahead of upcoming updates.

Work has likewise continued on improving documentation for decentralized exchange functionality, particularly for lending and liquidity pool mechanics. Infrastructure modernization remained a key area of focus, with automation, observability, and compatibility improvements across all systems receiving attention during this month.

Roadmap Updates

In summary, our recent development roadmap updates include:

  • Fraud, Theft, and Loss prevention systems,

  • Contingent Transaction Set endpoint development,

  • Expanded observability and automation frameworks,

  • Infrastructure modernization through Terraform and AWS improvements.

These initiatives reinforce DevvE’s long-term goals of scalability, security, and a developer-friendly environment.

Other Developments

This month, we have had numerous promising introductions and built strong foundational relationships on the business development and marketing fronts. For instance, in November we met with a tier‑1 ZK‑scaling foundation; an enterprise‑grade multi‑chain app network; and an open metaverse infrastructure initiative, to name a few.

We’ve also made positive progress with a leading institutional digital‑asset custody and transfer platform; and a major Web3 developer‑infrastructure provider. All in all, this month has resulted in solid traction with infrastructure protocols, wallets, fiat on‑ramps, and market makers alike.

We expect a similarly busy December as we head into 2026. Thank you for joining us on this journey.

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