Render Network was founded by Jules Urbach, CEO of OTOY — a Hollywood-grade 3D rendering software company with real enterprise customers including major VFX studios and film producers. This is a genuinely differentiated founder credential — Urbach built a commercial GPU rendering business before creating the decentralised version. The RENDER token originally launched on Ethereum in 2017 as RNDR and migrated to Solana in 2023 for faster, cheaper on-chain settlement. OTOY's existing client relationships provide Render with a genuine pipeline of professional GPU compute demand.
Render is a decentralised physical infrastructure (DePIN) marketplace connecting GPU providers with users needing high-performance computing for 3D rendering, visual effects, and increasingly AI model training and inference workloads. The Burn-Mint Equilibrium mechanism ties token economics directly to network usage — users burn RENDER to pay for jobs, and node operators are minted new RENDER as rewards. AI workloads now represent 35-40% of all job volume. A governance vote in April 2026 approved adding approximately 60,000 additional GPUs via Salad network integration. Over 68 million frames have been processed on the network.
RENDER has approximately 530 million tokens in circulation. RENDER peaked at approximately $13.53 and currently trades around $1.84 — approximately 86% below its all-time high. The Burn-Mint Equilibrium means token burns are directly linked to network usage, creating a usage-based deflationary mechanism. AI workloads accelerating burns by 278.9% is the key recent data point. Inflationary emissions to node operators are partially offset by job-driven burns as network usage grows.
Render competes with centralised cloud GPU providers (AWS, Google Cloud, Azure) and decentralised GPU networks including Akash and io.net. The key differentiator is OTOY's professional creative industry relationships and the established Burn-Mint Equilibrium that ties token economics directly to real usage. Render's Solana deployment provides speed and low transaction costs for the micro-settlement model.
AWS, Google Cloud, and Microsoft Azure have unlimited GPU capacity, enterprise-grade reliability, and deep customer relationships that a decentralised network will struggle to match for mission-critical workloads. The AI workload growth narrative is real, but the proportion of global AI compute handled by Render remains very small relative to centralised alternatives. The 86% ATH decline reflects the market's pricing in of these competitive realities.
AI compute demand grows faster than centralised cloud capacity, forcing significant workloads to decentralised alternatives; the 60,000 GPU governance expansion drives material burn acceleration; or OTOY enterprise relationships bring major VFX studio workloads onto the network at scale.
Centralised cloud providers maintain dominant market share for AI and rendering workloads, token emissions to node operators outpace burn rates as AI growth moderates, or competing DePIN GPU networks (io.net) capture more of the AI inference market.
We would become more positive if: AI workloads exceed 50% of network usage and burns consistently exceed emissions quarter-over-quarter, the 60,000 GPU expansion results in measurably lower prices that drive demand, or a major studio publicly adopts Render for a flagship production. We would become more cautious if: GPU expansion fails to drive usage growth, or competing GPU networks offer materially lower costs.
Render has one of the most credible real-world use cases of any DePIN project — OTOY's commercial rendering business provides genuine demand and industry credibility that most decentralised infrastructure projects lack. The AI compute narrative is real and growing. The core question is whether decentralised GPU networks can capture meaningful market share from AWS and Google Cloud. At 86% below its ATH, the market is currently sceptical — but the usage metrics (68M frames, 35-40% AI workloads) suggest genuine traction.