QuickNode Automates Multi-Chain Integration

Diving deeper into

Auston Bunsen, Co-Founder of QuickNode, on the infrastructure of multi-chain

Interview
it will generate all the code for us to add it to the site, the checkout process, and the platform.
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This reveals that QuickNode turned chain support from a custom engineering project into a repeatable product operation. Instead of treating each new blockchain like a fresh integration, QuickNode built an internal generator that can inspect a chain, decide what data needs caching or indexing, and then create the plumbing that makes that chain show up in the product catalog, billing flow, and customer dashboard almost automatically. This is why chain breadth can become a speed moat, not just a feature list.

  • The important detail is that the generated code does not just boot infrastructure. It also wires the chain into the customer facing layers where revenue happens, the website where developers pick networks, the checkout flow where they start paying, and the platform where endpoints are provisioned and managed. That compresses time from chain launch to sellable product.
  • This fits QuickNode's broader strategy of winning on multi-chain breadth and self serve monetization. In the interview, chain coverage sits alongside speed and credit card gated onboarding as a core differentiator versus Alchemy and Infura. Faster internal launch tooling means QuickNode can add supported networks before rivals finish manual integration work.
  • The model also creates leverage for higher level products. QuickNode now layers marketplace add-ons and even multi-chain APIs on top of its core endpoints, so every newly integrated chain can feed more than raw RPC access. That makes each additional chain more valuable than the last because it expands both infrastructure revenue and attached software revenue.

Going forward, the winners in blockchain infrastructure are likely to look less like node hosting vendors and more like factories for packaging new networks into sellable APIs. The companies that can operationalize chain launches fastest will capture the long tail of emerging chains first, then compound that lead by attaching analytics, indexing, and workflow products on top.