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Tempo Chain Goes Live on DeBank With Uniswap as Its First Supported Protocol

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Tempo Chain is now integrated into DeBank. The portfolio tracking platform, which covers Ethereum and EVM-compatible networks, has added Tempo as a supported chain with Uniswap included in the first batch of protocols.

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Tempo chain is now integrated in https://t.co/IEGJ3zLVHO! @tempo

1st batch of supported protocol: @Uniswap pic.twitter.com/2FOfqtzduV

— DeBank (@DeBankDeFi) March 23, 2026

For a Layer 1 blockchain built specifically for payments that went live on mainnet, appearing on DeBank is a meaningful infrastructure milestone. Users with assets on Tempo Chain can now track everything in DeBank without switching tabs or tools.

What Tempo Chain Is

Tempo is a purpose-built Layer 1 blockchain for payments, developed in partnership with leading fintechs. It is not a general-purpose smart contract platform that added payment features later. The entire architecture is oriented around payments at scale, which shapes everything from its consensus design to its fee structure to the kinds of applications it prioritizes for its ecosystem.

The fintech partnerships matter. Most payment-focused blockchains are built by crypto-native teams working toward traditional finance from the outside. Tempo was developed with fintech partners involved from the start, which changes the product priorities.

Fintechs care about different things than DeFi developers. Reliability, throughput, user experience that doesn’t require a crypto background to navigate. Tempo was built with those requirements in mind from the start.

The network is already live on mainnet. This is not a testnet integration or an announcement of future plans. Tempo is running, and the DeBank integration reflects its current operational status rather than a roadmap item.

What DeBank Adds for Tempo Users

DeBank is the portfolio tracker a lot of serious DeFi users rely on daily. One view, every chain, every position. Tempo Chain being added means anyone with assets on Tempo can now see them sitting next to their Ethereum, Base, and Arbitrum holdings without opening a separate tool.

That might sound like a convenience feature, but it has practical implications for adoption. Users who already rely on DeBank are more likely to explore and use a new chain when it shows up there. Discovery happens inside the tools people already use. A chain that isn’t visible in portfolio trackers is effectively invisible to a large segment of active DeFi users, regardless of what’s being built on it.

DeBank also functions as a credibility signal. It doesn’t add every chain that asks. Its integration decisions reflect what it considers active and legitimate enough to put in front of its users. Getting listed is itself a signal.

Why Uniswap as the First Protocol

Uniswap being the first supported protocol on Tempo Chain within the DeBank integration is not a minor detail. Uniswap is the most recognized DEX in crypto along with Hyperliquid. Its presence on a new chain signals that the network has enough liquidity infrastructure to support meaningful trading activity, and it gives DeBank users a familiar entry point for interacting with Tempo Chain for the first time.

For a payment-focused blockchain, having a major DEX operational and trackable early in its lifecycle also means users can move between payment utility and trading activity without leaving the ecosystem. Payments and swaps go together. Uniswap handles the swap side on Tempo Chain. The native payment infrastructure handles settlement. Both running on the same chain is the point.

The Bigger Picture for Tempo Chain

A payment blockchain needs two things. Infrastructure that actually works, and enough visibility that users and developers show up to use it. Tempo has the first in place with its mainnet launch and fintech partnerships. The DeBank integration, with Uniswap as the opening protocol, starts building the second.

More protocols will follow in subsequent batches. Each addition to DeBank’s supported protocol list for Tempo Chain expands what users can track, which expands what they are likely to use, which expands the activity that makes the chain more attractive to the next developer considering where to build.

What’s Ahead

Tempo Chain landing on DeBank with Uniswap as the first supported protocol is a straightforward but important step. It puts a payment-focused Layer 1 blockchain in front of DeBank’s active DeFi user base at the point when those users are already managing their portfolios. Visibility in the tools people use daily is how new chains build their initial user base, and Tempo now has it.