The Multichain Dream Is Dead. And That’s Okay
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NEW YORK, NY, October 01, 2025 /24-7PressRelease/ — Interoperability was never going to save crypto. Clarity might.
At one point, the crypto industry was obsessed with “multichain.” Not just as a technical reality, but as a kind of utopian vision. Protocols would be chain-agnostic. Wallets would be seamless. Liquidity would flow like water, users wouldn’t even know what chain they were on, and bridges would tie it all together.
Fast forward to now: most users live on one chain. Bridges are routinely exploited. And the only people checking seven block explorers a day are arbitrage bots and security researchers with a masochism kink.
Multichain isn’t dead because it was impossible. It’s dead because no one actually wanted it.
The UX Nobody Asked For
The fantasy of a multichain future depended on one very shaky assumption: that users care about decentralization as long as it comes with choices.
They don’t.
Most people want to open an app, tap a button, and see results. They don’t want to wrap tokens, switch networks, approve new RPC endpoints, and get charged six different gas fees in three currencies. That’s not freedom. That’s friction.
The more chains you add, the more breakpoints you create. The average user isn’t empowered by choice, they’re paralyzed by it. Multichain UX is like asking people to pick their favorite airport terminal to get on a flight. They just want to get to the destination.
Bridges Are Not Infrastructure. They’re Invitations.
Every major bridge, Wormhole, Ronin, Nomad, has suffered nine-figure exploits. That’s not an accident. It’s a pattern.
Bridges are honeypots. And they rely on assumptions about consensus and finality that don’t always translate across ecosystems. They’re clever hacks, not foundational infrastructure.
Yet for a while, we treated them like cornerstones.
Andre Cronje once said, “I don’t see multichain. I see single chains with bridges.” And as usual, he was early and right.
Consolidation Isn’t a Failure. It’s Maturity.
The reality is setting in: most users pick a chain and stay there. Ethereum has the mindshare. Solana has the speed. Base has the memes. Each one is evolving its own culture, tooling, and capital base.
That’s not fragmentation. That’s specialization.
There’s a reason Avalanche subnets, Cosmos zones, and Polkadot parachains never took off with the average user. They offer interoperability in theory, but not in experience. If the value proposition requires a blog post to explain, it’s probably not intuitive.
In practice, consolidation around a few dominant chains may be a feature, not a bug. It gives developers a common environment, creates deeper liquidity, and aligns incentives. It’s not the death of innovation, it’s the scaffolding for the next wave.
Let the Chains Compete: The Best UX Wins
Multichain maximalism was a philosophical stance. But markets don’t move on philosophy. They move on convenience.
Let the chains compete. Let them build better wallets, faster consensus, cheaper fees, and more secure contracts. Users will pick what works.
And when something breaks, they won’t blame “the multichain future.” They’ll blame the product that made it complicated in the first place.
That’s the real lesson here: interoperability doesn’t mean chaos. It means clarity.
And in crypto, clarity is the rarest and most valuable token of all.
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