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IOTA Hackathon Yields 66 New Projects as Token Jumps 6.5%

Joerg Hiller   Apr 17, 2026 14:04 0 Min Read


IOTA's European hackathon with MasterZ wrapped up at the end of March, producing 66 functional products from a pool of 200 selected developers. The token responded positively, trading at $0.059 with a 6.5% gain over 24 hours as of April 17.

The three-month initiative kicked off in January 2026 with developer selection, moved through February training sessions on the Move programming language and IOTA's Trust Framework, then shifted into full build mode throughout March. By the March 31 deadline, participants from ten European countries—including Spain, Germany, the UK, and France—had submitted their projects.

Five Projects Rise to the Top

Judges evaluated submissions on execution quality, real-world problem solving, and adoption potential. The winning projects tackle practical business problems rather than speculative use cases.

Textile Tracer builds verifiable digital product passports for the fashion supply chain, tracking garments from factory floor to recycling bin. The timing aligns with incoming EU transparency regulations.

Nplex tokenizes non-performing loans, cracking open a market typically reserved for institutional players. The project emphasizes compliance-first architecture—a smart move given regulatory scrutiny on tokenized assets.

IOTA Web Guardian forces AI systems to authenticate and pay before accessing content. With AI scraping becoming a hot-button issue for creators, this one addresses a genuine pain point.

DocuNotary and Tangle Gate round out the top five, targeting document fraud prevention and critical infrastructure access control respectively.

What Winners Actually Get

The top five teams head to a private Berlin event for direct ecosystem access. More importantly, the top ten enter an acceleration program run by MasterZ and AIO Blockchain Lab focused on market launch, partnerships, and fundraising.

Given submission quality, organizers extended acceleration access further. Projects ranking in the top 30 and top 60 now receive tailored go-to-market support—unusual for a hackathon to spread resources this broadly.

Special category awards went to VitalNode (B2B), Dead Man's Switch (B2C), and AquaCert (solo project), among others.

Context for IOTA Watchers

This hackathon follows IOTA's Moveathon Europe and represents the network's continued push toward real-world enterprise applications. The focus on Move—the programming language developed for Meta's abandoned Diem project—signals IOTA's technical direction.

With 66 products now built on IOTA infrastructure and acceleration programs underway, the next months will reveal whether these projects can convert hackathon momentum into actual market traction. The Berlin presentations should provide the first concrete signals.


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