Received a donation from V God, learn about the network state sandbox Zuitzerland | CryptoSeed
Author: Scof, ChainCatcher
Editor: TB, ChainCatcher
On April 3, Vitalik Buterin once again took action to support the future he believes in. He directly transferred 274 ETH, approximately $500,000, to the developers of the experimental project Zuitzerland. There was no overwhelming publicity, nor was it a grand fundraising event—just his consistent style: when he sees something worth supporting, he acts.
What is Zuitzerland? How is it related to the Zuzalu and Edge City projects previously supported by Vitalik? Why are so many builders, researchers, and creators paying attention?
What is Zuitzerland?
Zuitzerland is an experimental project dedicated to exploring possible paths for future societies. It combines cutting-edge technology, decentralized governance, and the advantages of real-world systems to create a "network state sandbox," providing a real social experimentation space for builders, researchers, and creators worldwide.
Launched in Switzerland, known for its 700-year tradition of local autonomy and direct democracy, Zuitzerland aims to leverage this institutional soil, combined with Web3 technology, to practice a replicable and verifiable new social structure.
It can be said that Zuitzerland is a continuation and evolution of the Zuzalu concept. Zuzalu was a pop-up city experiment initiated by Vitalik in 2023, attracting pioneers from Web3, AI, biotechnology, and other fields within two months. Its impact exceeded expectations, giving rise to extension projects like Edge City, while Zuitzerland takes a further step—establishing a long-term permanent node to ground the spirit of Zuzalu in real governance systems.
The project provides co-creation and testing platforms for participants through residency programs, pop-up events, hackathons, and other forms, focusing on cutting-edge areas such as Web3, AI, biotechnology, privacy computing, and brain-computer interfaces. It attempts to answer a key question: can a technology-driven, distributed yet resilient society truly operate in the real world?
The Practical Path of Zuitzerland
1. Turning "governance" from concept into reality
Currently, many decentralized projects and organizations face governance challenges: the concepts are advanced, but there is a lack of real application scenarios and effective testing platforms. Zuitzerland provides a small-scale, controllable real environment where new social structures and governance mechanisms can be genuinely tested. This is not just about discussing how "DAOs" operate, but about allowing people to live, collaborate, and self-govern in a real space while continuously optimizing the system.
Switzerland's institutional foundation provides a solid reference here. Zuitzerland draws on the experiences of Swiss democracy, such as referendums, local autonomy, and small-scale trust networks, providing a real template for decentralized governance.
2. Providing a landing platform for innovators from different backgrounds
Zuitzerland targets three core groups:
- Builders and doers: such as Web3 developers and DAO participants, who can test new tools and build communities here.
- Experts and researchers: policymakers, economists, and sociologists can observe or participate in real social prototype experiments.
- Creators: artists, philosophers, and cultural narrators inject humanistic depth into technological constructs.
Zuitzerland does not pursue "mass appeal," but rather provides a space for "deep interest participants" who are willing to engage in future experiments.
3. Promoting "safe technological acceleration"
Zuitzerland advocates the concept of "Defensive Accelerationism (d/acc)," where technological acceleration must simultaneously focus on safety, boundaries, and long-term resilience. In the current rapidly changing technological environment, how to maintain basic order and avoid systemic risks while innovating is a core issue. Switzerland's stability makes it an ideal testing ground for d/acc experiments.
4. Providing limited but real support and opportunities
The project will open applications, prioritizing those with a genuine willingness to participate but limited financial means. Some scholarships will support accommodation and other expenses (excluding transportation), and applicants need to demonstrate a willingness and ability for long-term participation.
Additionally, Zuitzerland uses NFT holders as part of the support selection process, allowing participants to support the project through Juicebox and gain priority, aligning with the community-driven logic advocated by the project.
Future Plans for the Project
Zuitzerland's activities will begin on May 1 and continue throughout May, featuring a series of themed weeks, workshops, summits, and hackathons centered around core topics such as community co-creation, Swiss governance, network states, cutting-edge technology, and future lifestyles. The participation fee for the project is approximately 650-2500 Swiss francs per week.
Participants will collaboratively explore social prototypes, technological applications, and institutional innovations, culminating in project development and results presentation in the final week. The entire process progresses from conceptual exploration to practical prototypes, forming a complete experimental loop.
(This article only introduces the early project and does not constitute investment advice.)

