Chains, Coins, dApps, DAOs.

The World in 2050: Collision of Existential Shifts
By 2050, humanity will inhabit a world reshaped by the collision of technological innovation, philosophical reorientation, and planetary urgency. The next 25 years will see the culmination of trends emerging today—AI’s ascendance, Web3’s decentralized ethos, and the geopolitical reordering of a multipolar world—while grappling with existential questions about identity, governance, and humanity’s place in the cosmos. Below, we explore the forces that will define this pivotal era.The Rise of De...

Web3: The Digital Renaissance Rewriting Power, and Ownership
Imagine an internet where your selfies could pay your rent. Where voting rights in global platforms weren’t inherited through stock ownership but earned through community contributions. Where teachers in Kenya could issue blockchain credentials recognized by MIT. This isn’t science fiction—it’s Web3’s unfolding reality, and it matters more than any technological shift since the invention of the printing press[1][4]. We stand at the precipice of a decentralization revolution that reconfigures ...

The Symbiosis and Rivalry of Ethereum and Bitcoin
Ethereum and Bitcoin—two titans of the blockchain era—stand as pillars of innovation, each reshaping finance, technology, and human collaboration. From Bitcoin’s genesis as "digital gold" to Ethereum’s evolution into a decentralized supercomputer, their interplay has defined the crypto landscape. This report unravels their intertwined histories, explores their converging and diverging paths, and forecasts how their rivalry and synergy will shape the next decade of decentralized systems.I. Gen...

The World in 2050: Collision of Existential Shifts
By 2050, humanity will inhabit a world reshaped by the collision of technological innovation, philosophical reorientation, and planetary urgency. The next 25 years will see the culmination of trends emerging today—AI’s ascendance, Web3’s decentralized ethos, and the geopolitical reordering of a multipolar world—while grappling with existential questions about identity, governance, and humanity’s place in the cosmos. Below, we explore the forces that will define this pivotal era.The Rise of De...

Web3: The Digital Renaissance Rewriting Power, and Ownership
Imagine an internet where your selfies could pay your rent. Where voting rights in global platforms weren’t inherited through stock ownership but earned through community contributions. Where teachers in Kenya could issue blockchain credentials recognized by MIT. This isn’t science fiction—it’s Web3’s unfolding reality, and it matters more than any technological shift since the invention of the printing press[1][4]. We stand at the precipice of a decentralization revolution that reconfigures ...

The Symbiosis and Rivalry of Ethereum and Bitcoin
Ethereum and Bitcoin—two titans of the blockchain era—stand as pillars of innovation, each reshaping finance, technology, and human collaboration. From Bitcoin’s genesis as "digital gold" to Ethereum’s evolution into a decentralized supercomputer, their interplay has defined the crypto landscape. This report unravels their intertwined histories, explores their converging and diverging paths, and forecasts how their rivalry and synergy will shape the next decade of decentralized systems.I. Gen...
Chains, Coins, dApps, DAOs.

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Perps matter because they’re where serious capital plays. In TradFi, futures drive most of the volume.
In crypto, perps are the main way degens express conviction, hedge risk, and rotate size across assets. Whoever owns perps owns liquidity. What if you could blend the speed and polish of a CEX with the trustlessness and composability of DeFi? That’s the question Hyperliquid answers-not with hype, but with architecture.
As a researcher who's followed perps since the early dYdX days, I see HL as the first perp protocol built with true vertical integration. This is a major departure from the usual token-first clones-it’s an attempt to make on-chain trading performant enough to eat CEX volume.
We have seen hundreds of perp plays come and go. Most are copy-pasta AMMs duct-taped to a Chainlink feed. Hyperliquid? It's a different beast-built for speed, scale, and serious size. Not another farm-and-dump scheme. This one hits different.

Degens know the pain: slippage nukes your size, oracles get lagged, L2s choke, and liquidity dries up after the airdrop. A 2022 paper by Chitra and Morrow (“DeFi Derivatives: Fragility in AMM-Based Perpetuals”) called it early-most perp protocols are brittle, slow, and ripe for manipulation.
The common issues:
AMMs: Slippage city when the market moves.
Oracles: Latency, exploits, and misaligned pricing.
L2s: Congestion kills fast execution.
Liquidity: Mercenary LPs chase emissions, then bounce.
This team breaks the mold of the typical anon dev crew. Hyperliquid was founded by Harvard alums Jeff Yan and Iliensinc, with HFT pedigree from Hudson River Trading and a crypto MM background. Their squad? Stacked-MIT, Caltech, Citadel, Nuro.
Started as MMs in 2020, saw how busted perp infra was, and said screw it-we’ll build our own chain. No VC leash, no token launch games. Just raw execution.
When most devs are tweaking basis points, HL built a whole new chain. No rollups, no L2 gas pain. HyperBFT lets them hit 20,000+ TPS and sub-1s blocks. Matching is off-chain, finality is on-chain, and everything moves at CEX speed.
CLOB maxis rejoice. No AMM slop here. Your limit orders are honored, and spread snipes are viable.
Internal price discovery = no Chainlink lag, no sandwich attacks. Pure flow-based pricing.
Cross-margin FTW. Fewer liquidations, better capital usage, and no juggling wallets.
No mercenary LP games. HLP vault is aligned with real MMs. $1.2B TVL and counting.
Traders: Instant fills, no gas grief, full control.
Builders: Full stack access, infra optimized for latency.
Investors: Moat, revenue, and adoption without token bribery.

Off-chain matching: Still a trust assumption.
March 2025 exploit: $6.2M loss via liquidation edge case.
No KYC: Might trigger regulators eventually.
Latest on-chain stats (via DefiLlama):
TVL: ~$765.5M
24h Perps Volume: $5.005B
24h Protocol Revenue: $1.01M
Bridged Assets: $2.54B
Aug 2024: $4.3B in 24h trading volume. Outsized everyone.
Q4 2024: 15x TVL growth in 4 months.
2025: Dominating with 70% on-chain perp share.
April 2025: $1M+ daily fee revenue. Out-feeing Ethereum.
Security hit: $6.2M exploit didn’t kill the protocol. They patched fast.
Hyperliquid has evolved beyond a simple perp engine. With the launch of HyperEVM, it's attracting builders across DeFi, GameFi, AI, and memes. Here's who's already shipping:
HyperLend - Lending market on HyperEVM.
Resolv - Delta-neutral stablecoin.
HyBridge - Cross-chain bridging tool.
Hyperlauncher - No-code launchpad for on-chain apps and meme tokens.
Vegas - On-chain casino with fast, tokenized betting.
HyperFun - Gamified $FUN token economy with burn mechanics.
Vapor - Launchpad for AI agent apps on HL.
Tokens: PURR, JEFF, CATBAL, LQNA, PIP gaining traction.
Hypurr Fun - Telegram bot for sniping/trading HL meme launches.
HypurrCollective - Community validator collab with Nansen.
Ecosystem is raw, chaotic, and growing fast-exactly how the next Solana-style boom starts.
Self-Funded Origins: Hyperliquid launched with no VC money and no pre-sale. The team bootstrapped everything internally, which is rare at this scale.
Anonymous Launch: Despite strong credentials, the team initially avoided any public spotlight, letting the product speak first.
No Token Until Late: HL ran without a token for over a year, while racking up volume and revenue. It flipped the playbook: traction first, token later.
Native RPCs + Infra: Hyperliquid runs its own low-latency RPC infrastructure, customized to serve high-frequency perps trading.
Fully Custom Consensus: HyperBFT is more than marketing fluff-it’s a proprietary consensus mechanism purpose-built for speed and state sync prioritization.
Here’s the controversy few want to touch: Hyperliquid might be the fastest-growing perp DEX, but it also operates more like a CEX under the hood. Off-chain matching, whitelisted validators, self-funded operations, and no token governance-these aren't typical DeFi traits.
It works. But let’s not pretend it’s fully trustless. The tradeoff is deliberate: speed and UX over decentralization purity. Whether that’s sustainable long term depends on whether users care more about sovereignty-or just getting the fill.
Perps aren’t just another product vertical-they’re the backbone of crypto capital markets. In TradFi, derivatives dominate trading volumes. In DeFi, perps are the primary vehicle for speculation, hedging, and liquidity rotation. Any protocol that captures perp flow becomes the gravitational center for stablecoins, yield products, and emerging assets. Hyperliquid's architecture positions it as not just a trading venue, but the foundation layer for an entire ecosystem of DeFi primitives.
Unlike many of its competitors, Hyperliquid resisted launching a token early. That gave it time to build sustainable volume and revenue. Now that a token is live (or anticipated), the open questions are:
How will value flow to token holders?
Will there be staking, fee sharing, or governance?
How does this compare to GMX’s esGMX model or dYdX’s v4 token?
Clarity here will determine whether HL becomes a financial layer or just another protocol with volume.
Currently, validator onboarding is permissioned. The team controls validator rotation, and there is no public roadmap for opening this up. Governance is minimal-to-nonexistent. For long-term resilience, this is the biggest area HL must address. A path to validator decentralization and formalized on-chain governance would strengthen its legitimacy in DeFi’s eyes.
Hyperliquid’s EVM layer unlocks smart contract composability, but it’s early days. There’s no official grants program, and ecosystem growth has so far been organic. A structured incentive framework (like Optimism’s RPGF or Arbitrum’s STIP) could catalyze more serious dev traction. The lack of upfront VC backing gives HL flexibility here, but it also limits growth if not addressed.
Latency Wars: HL’s edge today is infra. But as others optimize matching engines and RPCs, the latency moat may shrink.
Regulatory Blowback: HL operates without KYC, and high throughput = high visibility. If regulators crack down on “gray zone” infra, HL’s off-chain components could be a target.
Scaling Governance: Today’s model is efficient but opaque. Without community control over validators or protocol parameters, decentralization claims remain thin.
Hyperliquid is not perfect but it is instructive. It offers a tangible solution to the UX bottlenecks and latency gaps that have historically kept DeFi on the sidelines of serious volume. The architecture may not satisfy decentralization maximalists, but the execution clearly satisfies traders.
The team took real technical risk. They launched without VC safety nets, avoided the token-first trap, and scaled an off-chain engine that rivals CEX performance while preserving enough on-chain auditability to stay credible.
It will not be the last protocol to walk this line between performance and decentralization but it is one of the first to do it with intent, coherence, and traction. Whether you agree with the design choices or not, Hyperliquid has shifted the Overton window of what DeFi infra can look like.
Perps matter because they’re where serious capital plays. In TradFi, futures drive most of the volume.
In crypto, perps are the main way degens express conviction, hedge risk, and rotate size across assets. Whoever owns perps owns liquidity. What if you could blend the speed and polish of a CEX with the trustlessness and composability of DeFi? That’s the question Hyperliquid answers-not with hype, but with architecture.
As a researcher who's followed perps since the early dYdX days, I see HL as the first perp protocol built with true vertical integration. This is a major departure from the usual token-first clones-it’s an attempt to make on-chain trading performant enough to eat CEX volume.
We have seen hundreds of perp plays come and go. Most are copy-pasta AMMs duct-taped to a Chainlink feed. Hyperliquid? It's a different beast-built for speed, scale, and serious size. Not another farm-and-dump scheme. This one hits different.

Degens know the pain: slippage nukes your size, oracles get lagged, L2s choke, and liquidity dries up after the airdrop. A 2022 paper by Chitra and Morrow (“DeFi Derivatives: Fragility in AMM-Based Perpetuals”) called it early-most perp protocols are brittle, slow, and ripe for manipulation.
The common issues:
AMMs: Slippage city when the market moves.
Oracles: Latency, exploits, and misaligned pricing.
L2s: Congestion kills fast execution.
Liquidity: Mercenary LPs chase emissions, then bounce.
This team breaks the mold of the typical anon dev crew. Hyperliquid was founded by Harvard alums Jeff Yan and Iliensinc, with HFT pedigree from Hudson River Trading and a crypto MM background. Their squad? Stacked-MIT, Caltech, Citadel, Nuro.
Started as MMs in 2020, saw how busted perp infra was, and said screw it-we’ll build our own chain. No VC leash, no token launch games. Just raw execution.
When most devs are tweaking basis points, HL built a whole new chain. No rollups, no L2 gas pain. HyperBFT lets them hit 20,000+ TPS and sub-1s blocks. Matching is off-chain, finality is on-chain, and everything moves at CEX speed.
CLOB maxis rejoice. No AMM slop here. Your limit orders are honored, and spread snipes are viable.
Internal price discovery = no Chainlink lag, no sandwich attacks. Pure flow-based pricing.
Cross-margin FTW. Fewer liquidations, better capital usage, and no juggling wallets.
No mercenary LP games. HLP vault is aligned with real MMs. $1.2B TVL and counting.
Traders: Instant fills, no gas grief, full control.
Builders: Full stack access, infra optimized for latency.
Investors: Moat, revenue, and adoption without token bribery.

Off-chain matching: Still a trust assumption.
March 2025 exploit: $6.2M loss via liquidation edge case.
No KYC: Might trigger regulators eventually.
Latest on-chain stats (via DefiLlama):
TVL: ~$765.5M
24h Perps Volume: $5.005B
24h Protocol Revenue: $1.01M
Bridged Assets: $2.54B
Aug 2024: $4.3B in 24h trading volume. Outsized everyone.
Q4 2024: 15x TVL growth in 4 months.
2025: Dominating with 70% on-chain perp share.
April 2025: $1M+ daily fee revenue. Out-feeing Ethereum.
Security hit: $6.2M exploit didn’t kill the protocol. They patched fast.
Hyperliquid has evolved beyond a simple perp engine. With the launch of HyperEVM, it's attracting builders across DeFi, GameFi, AI, and memes. Here's who's already shipping:
HyperLend - Lending market on HyperEVM.
Resolv - Delta-neutral stablecoin.
HyBridge - Cross-chain bridging tool.
Hyperlauncher - No-code launchpad for on-chain apps and meme tokens.
Vegas - On-chain casino with fast, tokenized betting.
HyperFun - Gamified $FUN token economy with burn mechanics.
Vapor - Launchpad for AI agent apps on HL.
Tokens: PURR, JEFF, CATBAL, LQNA, PIP gaining traction.
Hypurr Fun - Telegram bot for sniping/trading HL meme launches.
HypurrCollective - Community validator collab with Nansen.
Ecosystem is raw, chaotic, and growing fast-exactly how the next Solana-style boom starts.
Self-Funded Origins: Hyperliquid launched with no VC money and no pre-sale. The team bootstrapped everything internally, which is rare at this scale.
Anonymous Launch: Despite strong credentials, the team initially avoided any public spotlight, letting the product speak first.
No Token Until Late: HL ran without a token for over a year, while racking up volume and revenue. It flipped the playbook: traction first, token later.
Native RPCs + Infra: Hyperliquid runs its own low-latency RPC infrastructure, customized to serve high-frequency perps trading.
Fully Custom Consensus: HyperBFT is more than marketing fluff-it’s a proprietary consensus mechanism purpose-built for speed and state sync prioritization.
Here’s the controversy few want to touch: Hyperliquid might be the fastest-growing perp DEX, but it also operates more like a CEX under the hood. Off-chain matching, whitelisted validators, self-funded operations, and no token governance-these aren't typical DeFi traits.
It works. But let’s not pretend it’s fully trustless. The tradeoff is deliberate: speed and UX over decentralization purity. Whether that’s sustainable long term depends on whether users care more about sovereignty-or just getting the fill.
Perps aren’t just another product vertical-they’re the backbone of crypto capital markets. In TradFi, derivatives dominate trading volumes. In DeFi, perps are the primary vehicle for speculation, hedging, and liquidity rotation. Any protocol that captures perp flow becomes the gravitational center for stablecoins, yield products, and emerging assets. Hyperliquid's architecture positions it as not just a trading venue, but the foundation layer for an entire ecosystem of DeFi primitives.
Unlike many of its competitors, Hyperliquid resisted launching a token early. That gave it time to build sustainable volume and revenue. Now that a token is live (or anticipated), the open questions are:
How will value flow to token holders?
Will there be staking, fee sharing, or governance?
How does this compare to GMX’s esGMX model or dYdX’s v4 token?
Clarity here will determine whether HL becomes a financial layer or just another protocol with volume.
Currently, validator onboarding is permissioned. The team controls validator rotation, and there is no public roadmap for opening this up. Governance is minimal-to-nonexistent. For long-term resilience, this is the biggest area HL must address. A path to validator decentralization and formalized on-chain governance would strengthen its legitimacy in DeFi’s eyes.
Hyperliquid’s EVM layer unlocks smart contract composability, but it’s early days. There’s no official grants program, and ecosystem growth has so far been organic. A structured incentive framework (like Optimism’s RPGF or Arbitrum’s STIP) could catalyze more serious dev traction. The lack of upfront VC backing gives HL flexibility here, but it also limits growth if not addressed.
Latency Wars: HL’s edge today is infra. But as others optimize matching engines and RPCs, the latency moat may shrink.
Regulatory Blowback: HL operates without KYC, and high throughput = high visibility. If regulators crack down on “gray zone” infra, HL’s off-chain components could be a target.
Scaling Governance: Today’s model is efficient but opaque. Without community control over validators or protocol parameters, decentralization claims remain thin.
Hyperliquid is not perfect but it is instructive. It offers a tangible solution to the UX bottlenecks and latency gaps that have historically kept DeFi on the sidelines of serious volume. The architecture may not satisfy decentralization maximalists, but the execution clearly satisfies traders.
The team took real technical risk. They launched without VC safety nets, avoided the token-first trap, and scaled an off-chain engine that rivals CEX performance while preserving enough on-chain auditability to stay credible.
It will not be the last protocol to walk this line between performance and decentralization but it is one of the first to do it with intent, coherence, and traction. Whether you agree with the design choices or not, Hyperliquid has shifted the Overton window of what DeFi infra can look like.
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