MegaETH Co-founder: 48 Hours After Escaping Dubai, I Reassess the Entire Crypto Scene
Original Article Title: Iran Bombing Dubai Forced Me to Confront Tech, Civilization, and Oddly Enough, Crypto-Natives
Original Article Author: brother bing, MegaETH Co-founder
Original Article Translation: BitpushNews
I am writing and publishing this article after crossing the UAE-Oman border. The transit took about an hour and was very smooth.
Over the past 48 hours, I have been completely awestruck by the technology involved in this war. It was my first time witnessing a missile up close and seeing the interception system destroy it. I also came across some surreal, geeky, and even somewhat eerie details, such as reports of Israeli hackers breaching a prayer app to send messages to Iranians.
I have been involved in the tech industry for a long time, but this was indeed my first firsthand experience with a defense system. It gave me a whole new perspective on the relationship between technology and civilization.
Technology may give the illusion that it is "upgrading" civilization, but in fact, it merely amplifies the original direction of civilization—much like leverage trading (don't lose hope just yet!).
Allow me to explain.
During a healthy cycle of civilization's ascent, technology serves as a productivity booster and a collaboration tool. The early internet embodied this feeling.
I still remember 17 years ago when I was applying to US universities in Beijing, receiving help on various forums: strangers sharing advice, essays, and strategies (including how to wisely use early decision admission). The concept of closed APIs was unheard of back then.
But in a downward cycle, technology transforms into something else. It becomes an attention weapon (sometimes even a literal weapon!).
My 60-year-old parents are more addicted to doomsday doomscrolling than I am (many of my millennial friends are very worried about our parents). The same internet that once brought us open knowledge is now feeding algorithm addiction.
This framework explains the internal tension felt by most crypto natives today. Cryptocurrency feels like it was invented for the world we currently live in, yet everyone seems disillusioned.
So, what exactly happened?
I don't want to rehash the common tropes about the "forgotten cyberpunk spirit" or "getting too cozy with TradFi" that many industry OGs have already written about. Instead, I'd like to put forth two ideas:
Cryptocurrency was never meant to be just an asset class. As Evgeny wrote in the "Golden Path," cryptocurrency was intended to be a parallel system, a way to rearchitect finance with fewer boundaries, lower coordination costs, and flexible exit mechanisms.
Then things shifted. Legitimacy was thrust upon us, almost too easily. And once people got a taste of legitimacy, they wanted more.
Technology, as an amplifier, naturally seeks the path of least resistance, that is, integrating with existing power structures to further this legitimacy.
It's important to note that bringing institutions into blockchain infrastructure is not inherently wrong.
However, in this process, we quietly abandoned many old dreams. I find myself increasingly drawn back to those early use cases: small-scale fully collateralized/undercollateralized lending experiments, Tontine-like structures, and even better cross-border savings and exchanges.
These use cases are boring. They won't make headlines, let alone drive token hype. In the race for attention maximization and valuation, these niche but structurally significant ideas have been sidelined.
Stablecoins perfectly embody this paradox. They fulfill the argument for "internet money," but often only as a more user-friendly "wrapper" for sovereign currencies, rather than a structurally independent monetary system.
By the way, Mega certainly shares the blame. We still have a long way to go.
In my view, much of today's success should rightly be called "blockchain," not "crypto." If the aim is for traditional finance to become middleware, that's fine too. But let's be honest about it. Back-end integration ≠ reinvention.
Enough, price has never been the reason for everyone's disappointment. The sad reality is: between "what we can build" and "what we choose to build," we chose the wrong direction.
Back to the initial question: What has this war taught the people in the crypto space?
Zooming out, civilizations do have their cycles. As a Chinese person, I grew up learning about the dynasties' rise and fall. But in all those tales of emperors, generals, and rebels, what ultimately shines through is individual agency.
I don't know how else to put it, but the native crypto won't win because it's liked by people.
Our initial success was only possible because we kept finding and publicly criticizing the reasons why the old systems were insufficient. Then, somehow, any anti-establishment voices during this process were silenced.
During a downturn, it's easy for technology to amplify financialization, manipulation, and superficial growth. It's much harder to quietly build infrastructure that can expand real sovereignty.
But developers can still choose which incentive mechanisms to code. Founders can still decide which use cases to prioritize. More importantly, the community can still choose which values to uphold.
If societal sentiment shifts towards insecurity and seeking validation, technology will amplify that insecurity. But if a sufficient number of people consciously anchor themselves in long-term structures, anchored in collaborative tools rather than attention traps, then perhaps leverage can still work in our favor.
Many friends disapproved of my crossing into Oman. They said the border was unpredictable and chaotic, advising me to stay in Dubai. Dubai is indeed very comfortable. But without firsthand verification, I would never know the truth of those claims. As it turned out, the border was calm, few people were around, and the process was smooth.
The global macro environment is not in our favor, but in the long run, it may be.
For us in the crypto community, repositioning ourselves, verifying things firsthand, choosing the right things, and in the most cliché way, carving out a parallel path, will never be too late.
Just as my favorite YouTuber says: You can have a very sharp knife, but if the person holding it is a coward, nothing will happen. Let's sharpen the blade. Let's not be cowards.
QED (Quod Erat Demonstrandum).
You may also like

Consumer-grade Crypto Global Survey: Users, Revenue, and Track Distribution

Prediction Markets Under Bias

Stolen: $290 million, Three Parties Refusing to Acknowledge, Who Should Foot the Bill for the KelpDAO Incident Resolution?

ASTEROID Pumped 10,000x in Three Days, Is Meme Season Back on Ethereum?

ChainCatcher Hong Kong Themed Forum Highlights: Decoding the Growth Engine Under the Integration of Crypto Assets and Smart Economy

Why can this institution still grow by 150% when the scale of leading crypto VCs has shrunk significantly?

Anthropic's $1 trillion, compared to DeepSeek's $100 billion

Geopolitical Risk Persists, Is Bitcoin Becoming a Key Barometer?

Annualized 11.5%, Wall Street Buzzing: Is MicroStrategy's STRC Bitcoin's Savior or Destroyer?

An Obscure Open Source AI Tool Alerted on Kelp DAO's $292 million Bug 12 Days Ago

Mixin has launched USTD-margined perpetual contracts, bringing derivative trading into the chat scene.
The privacy-focused crypto wallet Mixin announced today the launch of its U-based perpetual contract (a derivative priced in USDT). Unlike traditional exchanges, Mixin has taken a new approach by "liberating" derivative trading from isolated matching engines and embedding it into the instant messaging environment.
Users can directly open positions within the app with leverage of up to 200x, while sharing positions, discussing strategies, and copy trading within private communities. Trading, social interaction, and asset management are integrated into the same interface.
Based on its non-custodial architecture, Mixin has eliminated friction from the traditional onboarding process, allowing users to participate in perpetual contract trading without identity verification.
The trading process has been streamlined into five steps:
· Choose the trading asset
· Select long or short
· Input position size and leverage
· Confirm order details
· Confirm and open the position
The interface provides real-time visualization of price, position, and profit and loss (PnL), allowing users to complete trades without switching between multiple modules.
Mixin has directly integrated social features into the derivative trading environment. Users can create private trading communities and interact around real-time positions:
· End-to-end encrypted private groups supporting up to 1024 members
· End-to-end encrypted voice communication
· One-click position sharing
· One-click trade copying
On the execution side, Mixin aggregates liquidity from multiple sources and accesses decentralized protocol and external market liquidity through a unified trading interface.
By combining social interaction with trade execution, Mixin enables users to collaborate, share, and execute trading strategies instantly within the same environment.
Mixin has also introduced a referral incentive system based on trading behavior:
· Users can join with an invite code
· Up to 60% of trading fees as referral rewards
· Incentive mechanism designed for long-term, sustainable earnings
This model aims to drive user-driven network expansion and organic growth.
Mixin's derivative transactions are built on top of its existing self-custody wallet infrastructure, with core features including:
· Separation of transaction account and asset storage
· User full control over assets
· Platform does not custody user funds
· Built-in privacy mechanisms to reduce data exposure
The system aims to strike a balance between transaction efficiency, asset security, and privacy protection.
Against the background of perpetual contracts becoming a mainstream trading tool, Mixin is exploring a different development direction by lowering barriers, enhancing social and privacy attributes.
The platform does not only view transactions as execution actions but positions them as a networked activity: transactions have social attributes, strategies can be shared, and relationships between individuals also become part of the financial system.
Mixin's design is based on a user-initiated, user-controlled model. The platform neither custodies assets nor executes transactions on behalf of users.
This model aligns with a statement issued by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on April 13, 2026, titled "Staff Statement on Whether Partial User Interface Used in Preparing Cryptocurrency Securities Transactions May Require Broker-Dealer Registration."
The statement indicates that, under the premise where transactions are entirely initiated and controlled by users, non-custodial service providers that offer neutral interfaces may not need to register as broker-dealers or exchanges.
Mixin is a decentralized, self-custodial privacy wallet designed to provide secure and efficient digital asset management services.
Its core capabilities include:
· Aggregation: integrating multi-chain assets and routing between different transaction paths to simplify user operations
· High liquidity access: connecting to various liquidity sources, including decentralized protocols and external markets
· Decentralization: achieving full user control over assets without relying on custodial intermediaries
· Privacy protection: safeguarding assets and data through MPC, CryptoNote, and end-to-end encrypted communication
Mixin has been in operation for over 8 years, supporting over 40 blockchains and more than 10,000 assets, with a global user base exceeding 10 million and an on-chain self-custodied asset scale of over $1 billion.

$600 million stolen in 20 days, ushering in the era of AI hackers in the crypto world

Vitalik's 2026 Hong Kong Web3 Summit Speech: Ethereum's Ultimate Vision as the "World Computer" and Future Roadmap

On the same day Aave introduced rsETH, why did Spark decide to exit?

Full Post-Mortem of the KelpDAO Incident: Why Did Aave, Which Was Not Compromised, End Up in Crisis Situation?

After a $290 million DeFi liquidation, is the security promise still there?

ZachXBT's post ignites RAVE nearing zero, what is the truth behind the insider control?







