# Сопутствующие статьи по теме Casino

Новостной центр HTX предлагает последние статьи и углубленный анализ по "Casino", охватывающие рыночные тренды, новости проектов, развитие технологий и политику регулирования в криптоиндустрии.

Public Chains 2025: The Bustle Belongs to the Casino, the Desolation to the Ecosystem

The 2025 public blockchain landscape reveals a stark divide between hype and reality, with a severe concentration of value and widespread "zombification" of projects. Analysis of DeFiLlama's on-chain fee data exposes a critical structural issue: the crypto space is dominated by a "profit concentration and long-tail zombie" era. Notable examples highlight this crisis. Algorand, a chain with a $1 billion market cap and advanced technology, generated a mere $17 in daily fees, while Cardano, a top-10 asset, saw only around $6,000. These "classic chains" are likened to empty, expensive cities with no real economic activity. The biggest value capturers are not the most technologically elegant chains. Tron leads with $1.24 million in daily fees, succeeding as a low-cost payment rail for USDT transfers—crypto's only true mass-adoption use case. Solana ($600k daily) thrives as a high-frequency casino for meme coins and speculation, and Base ($105k daily) demonstrates that distribution (via Coinbase) is more critical than pure technology. The only validated business models generating significant fees are low-cost payments, high-frequency speculation, and, to a lesser extent, Ethereum's asset settlement layer. The VC-driven model is failing. New chains like Sui, Sei, and Starknet, which raised hundreds of millions, show a severe disconnect between their high valuations and meager daily fee revenue (ranging from $320 to $12,000). Their lifecycle often follows a "pump and dump" pattern: VC funding -> airdrop farming -> token listing -> user exodus -> collapsed on-chain activity. The industry suffers from a massive oversupply of block space with a dire lack of killer applications. The article concludes that investors must shift from valuing narratives to scrutinizing financials. They should avoid "zombie coins" with high valuations and negligible fees, focus on chains with organic, fee-generating demand, acknowledge that distribution and community are now more valuable than pure tech, and see through the VC subsidy game. This is a necessary market correction; only by paying for real, generated value—not promised future stories—can the industry achieve healthy growth.

比推12/18 06:36

Public Chains 2025: The Bustle Belongs to the Casino, the Desolation to the Ecosystem

比推12/18 06:36

Don't Lose Heart in Crypto, Be a Pragmatic Optimist

Nic Carter, co-founder of Castle Island Ventures, responds to Ken Chan’s pessimistic essay “I Wasted 8 Years of My Life in Crypto” by arguing for a pragmatic and optimistic outlook on the crypto industry. While acknowledging that Chan’s critique—that crypto has devolved into a massive speculative casino rather than a decentralized financial system—contains truth, Carter contends that the industry still holds meaningful purpose. Carter identifies five core visions driving crypto: restoring sound money (e.g., Bitcoin as a global monetary asset), encoding business logic via smart contracts, making digital property real (e.g., NFTs and Web3), improving capital market efficiency, and expanding global financial inclusion. He admits that many early idealistic expectations—such as hyperbitcoinization or revolutionary digital ownership—have not materialized, and that much of the current activity involves speculation, memecoins, and gambling. However, Carter advocates for “pragmatic optimism.” He argues that speculative excess and financial nihilism are unfortunate but inevitable byproducts of building permissionless, open financial infrastructure. The key is to focus on the real, albeit gradual, progress: Bitcoin’s adoption, functional stablecoins, decentralized exchanges, and improved financial access in developing regions—without succumbing to either utopian fantasies or cynical despair.

marsbit12/11 21:43

Don't Lose Heart in Crypto, Be a Pragmatic Optimist

marsbit12/11 21:43

Rebuttal: I Don't Regret Spending 8 Years in the Crypto Industry

Ken Chang recently wrote an article lamenting his eight years in crypto as a waste, describing the industry as inherently destructive and a system of financial nihilism that has built the world's largest casino. While many in the space dismiss such critiques, the author acknowledges that Ken’s disillusionment—shared by earlier figures like Mike Hearn—stems from a genuine idealistic disappointment. Crypto promised decentralization and a new financial system but largely delivered speculation and gambling. The author identifies five core aspirations of cryptocurrency: restoring sound money, encoding business logic via smart contracts, making digital property real, improving capital market efficiency, and expanding global financial inclusion. While progress has been made in areas like Bitcoin, stablecoins, and certain efficient financial infrastructures, many grand visions—like overthrowing fiat or revolutionizing digital ownership—remain unfulfilled. The author advocates for a "pragmatic optimism." Speculation and casino-like dynamics are seen as unfortunate but inevitable side effects of building permissionless, open financial infrastructure. The key is to focus on the real, albeit gradual, progress—such as improved financial access and inclusion—while accepting that transformative change is slow and often captured by incremental efficiency gains, not revolution. The goal remains worthy, even if the path is messier than hoped.

marsbit12/11 06:04

Rebuttal: I Don't Regret Spending 8 Years in the Crypto Industry

marsbit12/11 06:04

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