For months, the “best altcoin to buy” debates have mostly been a two-horse race: Ethereum for its entrenched dominance and Solana for its blistering throughput and growing DeFi footprint. But this August, a new ticker is slipping into the conversation—RTX—and not because it’s chasing a meme-fueled pump.
It’s because of PayFi.
From Obscurity to the Shortlist
RTX was, until recently, a mid-tier project with respectable tech and limited brand recognition. That changed when the team unveiled PayFi—a decentralized payment layer designed to bridge on-chain assets with traditional banking rails without the usual friction or compliance nightmares.
It’s the kind of pitch that plays well in venture boardrooms: cross-border remittances, merchant adoption, and an architecture that could theoretically handle microtransactions without bleeding users in fees.
One London-based analyst told me flatly, “If they deliver what the whitepaper promises, this becomes less about being a speculative alt and more about being a payments network challenger.”
Why It’s Beating Out the Giants—At Least in Analyst Models
Ethereum remains king of composability and developer mindshare. Solana keeps scoring wins in NFT marketplaces and high-frequency DeFi. But both are still fighting scaling-versus-fee battles in different forms.
RTX, for now, isn’t trying to replace them—it’s skating to a different puck. PayFi’s value prop is utility first, speculation second. Early testnets have shown sub-second settlement times for transactions under $20, and its planned integration with multiple CBDC pilots has some policy watchers quietly paying attention.
For funds building exposure in payment-focused Web3 plays, that combination of speed, cost, and compliance narrative is hard to ignore.
The Skeptics’ List
It’s not all tailwinds. RTX is still small enough to be vulnerable to liquidity shocks, and its token distribution leaves plenty of room for early backers to dump if hype spikes. Regulatory engagement is another wildcard; partnering with banking systems often means dancing on shifting political floors.
And then there’s the simple reality that Ethereum and Solana aren’t standing still. Both are actively working on upgrades that could swallow PayFi’s competitive edge if execution falters.
The Road Ahead
RTX’s immediate challenge is turning promise into proof. A public beta of PayFi is slated for late Q4, and the team claims merchant onboarding will begin “in the hundreds” early next year. Whether that’s reality or marketing optimism will determine if RTX keeps its seat at the altcoin grown-ups’ table.
For now, though, the fact that seasoned analysts are willing to put RTX in the same sentence as Solana and Ethereum — and not as a punchline — is the biggest signal of all.



