Fuzzland

  • Name: Fuzzland
  • URL: https://fuzz.land/
  • Category: Smart-contract security / continuous analysis / mempool mitigation infrastructure
  • Summary: Fuzzland is a smart-contract-security company and tooling ecosystem centered on continuous onchain analysis, alerting, and active exploit mitigation. Its public materials position the commercial stack around the Blaz+ product suite for 24/7 penetration testing, security-layer alerts, and mempool-speed attack intervention, while its public GitHub presence highlights ItyFuzz, a hybrid smart-contract fuzzer combining fuzzing and symbolic or concolic techniques.
  • What it does:
    • Offers Blaz+ Analysis for continuous smart-contract penetration testing using AI, fuzzing, and formal-verification-style techniques across live protocol activity
    • Offers Blaz+ Alert for real-time monitoring across blockchain and infrastructure layers, including exploit and anomalous-system notifications
    • Offers Blaz+ Mitigation for active response, with public materials describing bots that analyze the mempool and attempt to front-run or back-run malicious transactions to protect assets
    • Maintains ItyFuzz, an open-source EVM and MoveVM hybrid fuzzer that can work from contract addresses or bytecode, generate exploits automatically, and integrate into CI/CD flows
    • Publishes additional open-source security and research tooling through its GitHub organization, including Move-focused fuzzing work and the OSWAR attack-and-vulnerability framework
  • Key claims:
    • Fuzzland says its platform provides 24/7 onchain penetration testing across thousands of transactions per second
    • Blaz+ Mitigation materials explicitly describe proactive and reactive attack intervention through mempool-speed transaction hijacking, front-running, and back-running strategies
    • ItyFuzz docs say the tool requires no manually written invariants, can autonomously generate exploits when vulnerabilities are found, and supports complex DeFi states plus CI/CD integration
    • ItyFuzz materials claim strong benchmark performance relative to Echidna, Foundry, Harvey, and SMARTIAN, plus backtesting coverage across previously exploited projects
    • The GitHub org shows a meaningful open-source footprint beyond a marketing site, which helps anchor the company’s technical lineage in fuzzing and exploit-generation research rather than generic audit branding
  • Whitepaper: No single company or protocol whitepaper was found during this pass. The strongest primary materials were the official product pages, the ItyFuzz docs portal, the ItyFuzz research-paper links, and Fuzzland’s public GitHub organization; see ../whitepapers/fuzzland-primary-sources-2026-04-26.md.
  • Sources:
  • Last reviewed: 2026-04-26 UTC