I love the concept -- I've often wished that lean languages like Lua had more support for static typing, especially given the potential performance benefits.
I also love the focus on performance. I'm curious if you've considered using a tail call design for the interpreter. I've found this to be the best way to get good code out of the compiler: https://blog.reverberate.org/2021/04/21/musttail-efficient-i... Unfortunately it's not portable to MSVC.
In that article I show that this technique was able to match Mike Pall's hand-coded assembly for one example he gave of LuaJIT's interpreter. Mike later linked to the article as a new take for how to optimize interpreters: https://github.com/LuaJIT/LuaJIT/issues/716#issuecomment-854...
Python 3.14 also added support for this style of interpreter dispatch and got a modest performance win from it: https://blog.reverberate.org/2025/02/10/tail-call-updates.ht...
You may be interested in Luau, which is the gradually-typed dialect of Lua maintained by Roblox. The game Alan Wake 2 also used it for level scripting.
I see lua, do you know terralang?
I did experiment with a few different dispatch methods before settling on the one in Bolt now, though not with tailcalls specifically. The approach I landed on was largely chosen cause it in my testing competes with computed goto solutions while also compiling on msvc, but I'm absolutely open to try other things out.