Project background

RedStone Oracles

RedStone Oracles is a modular oracle network that streams reliable, low‑latency price feeds for 1,250+ assets across 70+ blockchains. Its pull‑based architecture enables gas‑efficient, cross‑chain delivery and flexible data packaging.

Executive Team

Jakub Wojciechowski

CEO & Founder

Leads RedStone’s oracle vision; 13-yr FinTech engineer & multi-hackathon winner.

Marcin Kaźmierczak

Co-founder

Guides RedStone’s strategy and partnerships; Forbes Poland 30 Under 30 laureate.

Alex Suvorov

Co-founder

Leads RedStone’s oracle engineering; built high-throughput data pipelines powering DeFi protocols.

Matt Gurbiel

Head of BD

Drives RedStone’s growth and partnerships; ex-Unilever, 50+ Web3 events veteran.

Research & Analysis

Comprehensive insights and technical deep dives into the project

Blueprint

Visual breakdown of RedStone's architecture and competitive advantages

Proof of Vision

Watch our interview with Marcin, Co-Founder of RedStone Oracles

In the Alea Spotlight

A collection of RedStone features across our media channels

  • RedStone Oracles: $RED Staking, Securitize Partnership & More: What You Need to Know

    31ShareOracles are one of the underlooked areas of crypto, their importance not recognized by most users in their day-to-day transactions. Oracles are a key building block of DeFi dApps, as they connect on-chain smart contracts with external data that lives off-chain.

  • RedStone Oracles - Modular Oracle Architecture for the DeFi Landscape: What You Need to Know

    3ShareOracles are truly one of the more underappreciated areas within crypto, one of the foundational pieces that the apps we use of all types rely on. As blockchain usecases grow in number and more adoption is seen, having dependable oracle networks becomes even more critical. Things like RWAs, prediction markets, and any number of uses for AI as well as other hot narratives need to be provided with the best when it comes to price feeds and other onchain data delivery. A young but rapidly maturing industry like crypto leaves a lot of room for a new generation of Oracle protocols to prove their worth and compete with incumbents, namely Chainlink. It is indeed hard to gauge marketshare when it comes to the oracles landscape in crypto. Nonetheless, we’ve seen new competitors like Pyth rise to the occasion, especially for low-latency usecases in DeFi, fetching a multi-billion dollar FDV even after the latest market dump. This is just but one example of the open door providing opportunity for competitors in the oracles space…

  • Current Oracles Landscape: What You Need to Know

    3ShareOracles aren’t the most sexy topic in crypto, but they’re an extremely important aspect of the underlying infrastructure of onchain activities. In a trading/DeFi context, oracles are primarily responsible for providing price feeds to price assets. This is vital for DeFi derivatives. Perps traders need reliable oracles to use a protocol without risk of random or unpredictable liquidations. Those engaging in borrowing and lending also need stable oracle pricing to ensure their positions aren’t exposed to unwarranted liquidation risks, which is especially true for looping positions. 

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to common questions about RedStone

1

How does RedStone deliver data faster and cheaper than legacy oracles?

Injecting signed data on-demand, RedStone’s Core model refreshes feeds every 2-10 seconds and cuts oracle gas spend by roughly 90 %.

2

Which assets make RedStone stand out?

RedStone specialises in yield-bearing collateral: first oracle with market- and exchange-rate feeds for LST/LRT tokens, plus 1 000+ additional assets.

3

What secures RedStone against bad data?

Security stems from ETH restaked via Ether.fi’s AVS, soon augmented by slashable $RED stakes, and has passed four ABDK & AuditOne audits.

4

Who already uses RedStone feeds?

Lending leaders Morpho and Venus, yield protocol Pendle, and 70+ chains—including Ethereum, Base, TON, Starknet—already rely on RedStone feeds daily.

5

Does one oracle model fit every dApp?

Developers choose Core (pull), Classic (push), X (perps), or the ERC-7412 hybrid, balancing latency, update control, and front-running protection.