Built from Curiosity, Driven by Decentralization

Back in early 2019, a small group of us started playing around with Web3 concepts. It wasn't formal—just late nights, scattered ideas, and a shared belief that the internet could be something better. We didn't have a grand plan. What we had was a stubborn curiosity about what might happen if ownership and control shifted from massive platforms back to individual users.

By mid-2021, we'd built enough tools and conducted enough experiments to feel like we were onto something. That's when BlazeVoltKinetic formally launched in Taipei. We're not here to reinvent everything overnight. We're here to help businesses and learners understand what decentralization actually means—and how to use it without the hype.

Early Web3 development environment with decentralized network visualizations

How We Got Here

Our path wasn't linear. We tried things, failed at some, learned from most, and kept going.

2019-2020

Started as a research collective exploring smart contracts and distributed storage. We built prototypes that nobody used, but we learned how blockchain networks actually behave under real conditions.

2021-2022

Shifted from pure research to practical education. Launched our first structured programs in Taipei, focusing on developers and tech professionals who wanted to understand decentralized systems without the marketing noise.

2023-2025

Expanded offerings to include business strategy, regulatory considerations, and real-world implementation challenges. Our programs now serve both technical and non-technical audiences across Taiwan and beyond.

The People Behind the Work

We're a small team with varied backgrounds. What connects us is a practical interest in how decentralized systems can solve actual problems—not just theoretical ones.

Liselotte Vinter, Lead Curriculum Designer at BlazeVoltKinetic

Liselotte Vinter

Lead Curriculum Designer

Liselotte joined us in 2022 after spending years teaching computer science at university level. She got frustrated with how disconnected academic blockchain courses were from real implementations. So she left and started building educational programs that actually prepare people for the messy, evolving world of Web3.

She designs our learning paths, writes a lot of our technical materials, and occasionally reminds the rest of us that just because something is technically possible doesn't mean it's useful. Her background in pedagogy keeps our programs grounded and accessible.

What We Actually Do

Hands-on Web3 workshop session with live coding and decentralized application development

Education That Respects Complexity

We don't simplify Web3 to the point of uselessness. Our programs walk through the difficult parts—consensus mechanisms, gas optimization, security trade-offs. But we do it in stages, with real examples and practical exercises.

Students work with actual test networks. They deploy contracts, debug transactions, and deal with the same issues they'll face in production environments. It's not easy, but it's honest.

Strategic planning session for decentralized application architecture and implementation

Business Strategy Without the Hype

A lot of companies ask us if they need blockchain. Often, the answer is no. When it is yes, we help them figure out which aspects of decentralization actually serve their business model and which are just expensive complications.

We've worked with supply chain operations, digital rights management platforms, and financial services—always starting with their actual problems rather than our preferred technologies. Sometimes that means building on public chains. Sometimes it means permissioned networks. Sometimes it means waiting.

What Matters to Us

We have a few non-negotiable principles that shape everything we do. They're not marketing slogans—they're operational guidelines that we actually follow, even when it's inconvenient.

Accuracy Over Excitement

We'd rather be precise than impressive. That means admitting when solutions are experimental, when trade-offs exist, and when simpler centralized approaches might work better.

Practical Before Theoretical

We teach concepts through implementation. Theory matters, but only when it's connected to what you'll actually build or deploy.

Long-Term Relationships

We're interested in what our students and clients do after they finish working with us. Success isn't completing a program—it's applying what you learned six months later.

Ready to Explore Web3 Seriously?

Our next cohort starts in September 2025. Whether you're technical or strategic, we have programs designed around real-world application.

Get in Touch