
Evgeny Gaevoy delivered a blunt assessment of crypto’s direction, arguing the industry has stalled on substance even as speculation continues to dominate attention.
In a thread published on X, Gaevoy said debates between rival blockchains are largely meaningless, claiming none have delivered breakthroughs significant enough to establish clear winners or losers.
“I don’t think anything built on blockchains scales currently including and especially perp exchanges,”
Gaevoy wrote, questioning whether decentralised perpetual futures platforms can ever match traditional market infrastructure.
He criticised stablecoins as a narrow success that merely replaces one set of centralised intermediaries with another, without meaningfully changing the industry’s underlying structure.
Gaevoy contrasted crypto risk management with traditional markets such as the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, arguing that CME’s prime-broker-based model distributes risk more effectively than onchain mechanisms reliant on liquidations and insurance funds.
He also said crypto’s philosophical roots have faded, with bitcoin’s original purpose eclipsed by price obsession and institutional narratives, singling out Vitalik Buterin as a rare voice still focused on first principles.
Despite his criticism, Gaevoy said he remains cautiously optimistic that the absence of speculative euphoria could clear out short-term participants and leave more committed builders behind.
At the time of reporting, Bitcoin price was $71,354.53.