The following is a guest post by Nischal Shetty, co-founder and President at Shardeum. On 2nd January 2026, an anonymous trader on crypto prediction platform PolymarketThe following is a guest post by Nischal Shetty, co-founder and President at Shardeum. On 2nd January 2026, an anonymous trader on crypto prediction platform Polymarket

Crypto bets on war go mainstream

5 min read

The following is a guest post by Nischal Shetty, co-founder and President at Shardeum.

On 2nd January 2026, an anonymous trader on crypto prediction platform Polymarket put down roughly $30,000 on a contract that Nicolás Maduro would be out of power by 31 January 2026. Within hours of a U.S. special forces raid that resulted in Maduro’s capture, that position was worth more than $436,000. Meanwhile, traders had placed over $10.5 million on related bets about a U.S. invasion this year, many tying outcomes to specific deadlines in January, March, and December. Some participants staked tens of thousands of dollars on these geopolitical questions. Polymarket has since refused to settle certain contracts, triggering accusations of arbitrary rule-making and regulatory gaps around event definitions in prediction markets.

That episode illustrates a broader shift that came into focus in 2025. Instruments once confined to fringe corners of crypto trading, like onchain perpetual contracts and crypto-based prediction markets, crossed a threshold from niche experiments to high-volume, mainstream infrastructures. Volumes surged. Execution and liquidity matured. Distribution broadened beyond specialist desks into consumer wallets and messaging apps.

The Polymarket controversy is not an outlier. Retail participation in derivatives and leveraged products is already high. Appetite for speculative markets is proven. Regulatory clarity remains unresolved. When geopolitical outcomes and leveraged exposures are tradable with a tap, users will engage.

The change in 2025 was not in demand. It was in Structure. Infrastructure finally stopped being the bottleneck.

Infrastructure Stopped Being the Bottleneck

The single most important shift in 2025 was architectural.

Leading decentralized perp platforms moved away from shared, general-purpose blockchains toward purpose-built environments. Hyperliquid launched its own custom Layer 1. dYdX migrated from Ethereum to a Cosmos-based appchain. Others followed similar paths.

This allowed platforms to control execution end-to-end. Latency dropped to sub-second levels. Gas fees disappeared from the user experience. Order books updated in real time. Liquidations became predictable rather than chaotic.

For leveraged trading, these details are decisive. A few hundred milliseconds can determine profit or forced liquidation. By 2025, decentralized perps largely closed the performance gap with centralized venues.

Liquidity Design Mattered More Than Raw Speed

Speed alone did not drive adoption. Liquidity engineering did.

Earlier decentralized perpetual platforms relied on thin order books or external market makers. That model failed during volatility, when slippage spiked and trades failed. Trust evaporated quickly.

In 2025, platforms redesigned liquidity from first principles.

Some introduced internal matching systems that netted long and short positions before tapping shared liquidity. Others used LP-backed pools that guaranteed execution at oracle prices, eliminating slippage for most users. A few allowed yield-bearing collateral, lowering the effective cost of leverage.

These changes improved capital efficiency and user outcomes simultaneously. Traders got reliable execution. Liquidity providers earned steadier returns. Volume became persistent rather than episodic.

Distribution Changed Everything

The most underappreciated shift in 2025 was distribution.

Perpetual futures stopped being something users had to “go to.” They became features embedded in products users already used.

Wallets like MetaMask and Phantom integrated perp trading directly. Telegram emerged as a major distribution channel through trading mini-apps embedded in chats. Aggregators abstracted away venue selection entirely.

This collapsed onboarding friction. Users no longer bridged assets, managed gas, or learned new interfaces. They traded leverage from the same place they stored assets or communicated.

The result was a surge in first-time leverage users. This was not just more volume from professionals. It was a broadening of the user base.

For India, this is especially relevant. Telegram penetration is high. Wallet adoption is growing. When leverage becomes one tap away, market participation scales quickly—for better and for worse.

Asset Expansion Widened the Market

Crypto-only perps capped growth.

In 2025, several decentralized platforms expanded into synthetic exposure for foreign exchange, commodities, and equities. Traders gained 24/7 access to global markets with leverage levels often unavailable in traditional retail channels.

This unlocked new demand, particularly in emerging markets where access to global derivatives is restricted or expensive. It also introduced sharper regulatory questions around investor protection, disclosures, and risk controls.

From a market-structure perspective, decentralized perps began to resemble a parallel global derivatives layer rather than a crypto-specific product.

Regulation Lowered Existential Risk

Regulation did not cause this growth. But it reduced the probability of sudden failure.

In the U.S. and other major jurisdictions, clearer frameworks around stablecoins and settlement assets reduced uncertainty. Regulators signaled engagement rather than blanket hostility. Institutions gained enough comfort to experiment.

For India, the contrast is stark. Domestic exchanges operate under heavy restrictions. Offshore platforms attract Indian users without local oversight.

Ignoring them does not reduce risk. It shifts it elsewhere.

Why 2025 Was the Turning Point

Each of these elements existed before. What changed was their convergence.

Infrastructure matured. Liquidity models improved. Distribution went mainstream. Regulatory uncertainty declined. Trading conditions rewarded active participation.

Together, they pushed decentralized perps from theory into reality.

What Comes Next

The risks are obvious. Embedded leverage increases the chance of retail harm. Product design choices now carry regulatory and reputational consequences. Enforcement gaps will be tested.

Competition will intensify. Speed will no longer be enough. Trust, risk tooling, and user protection will differentiate winners.

For policymakers and financial institutions in India, the lesson is not that decentralized exchanges will replace incumbents tomorrow. It is that global market structure innovation is happening outside traditional rails, at scale.

In 2025, crypto’s most aggressive market grew up. India cannot afford to look away.

Disclaimer – this was a promoted (paid) post as part of our Thought Leadership program for contributors.

The post Crypto bets on war go mainstream appeared first on CryptoSlate.

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Taiko and Chainlink to Unleash Reliable Onchain Data for DeFi Ecosystem

Taiko and Chainlink to Unleash Reliable Onchain Data for DeFi Ecosystem

Taiko and Chainlink Data Streams to deliver secure, high-speed onchain data by empowering next-generation DeFi protocols and institutional-grade adoption.
Share
Blockchainreporter2025/09/18 06:10
Why The Green Bay Packers Must Take The Cleveland Browns Seriously — As Hard As That Might Be

Why The Green Bay Packers Must Take The Cleveland Browns Seriously — As Hard As That Might Be

The post Why The Green Bay Packers Must Take The Cleveland Browns Seriously — As Hard As That Might Be appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Jordan Love and the Green Bay Packers are off to a 2-0 start. Getty Images The Green Bay Packers are, once again, one of the NFL’s better teams. The Cleveland Browns are, once again, one of the league’s doormats. It’s why unbeaten Green Bay (2-0) is a 8-point favorite at winless Cleveland (0-2) Sunday according to betmgm.com. The money line is also Green Bay -500. Most expect this to be a Packers’ rout, and it very well could be. But Green Bay knows taking anyone in this league for granted can prove costly. “I think if you look at their roster, the paper, who they have on that team, what they can do, they got a lot of talent and things can turn around quickly for them,” Packers safety Xavier McKinney said. “We just got to kind of keep that in mind and know we not just walking into something and they just going to lay down. That’s not what they going to do.” The Browns certainly haven’t laid down on defense. Far from. Cleveland is allowing an NFL-best 191.5 yards per game. The Browns gave up 141 yards to Cincinnati in Week 1, including just seven in the second half, but still lost, 17-16. Cleveland has given up an NFL-best 45.5 rushing yards per game and just 2.1 rushing yards per attempt. “The biggest thing is our defensive line is much, much improved over last year and I think we’ve got back to our personality,” defensive coordinator Jim Schwartz said recently. “When we play our best, our D-line leads us there as our engine.” The Browns rank third in the league in passing defense, allowing just 146.0 yards per game. Cleveland has also gone 30 straight games without allowing a 300-yard passer, the longest active streak in the NFL.…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 00:41
One Of Frank Sinatra’s Most Famous Albums Is Back In The Spotlight

One Of Frank Sinatra’s Most Famous Albums Is Back In The Spotlight

The post One Of Frank Sinatra’s Most Famous Albums Is Back In The Spotlight appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Frank Sinatra’s The World We Knew returns to the Jazz Albums and Traditional Jazz Albums charts, showing continued demand for his timeless music. Frank Sinatra performs on his TV special Frank Sinatra: A Man and his Music Bettmann Archive These days on the Billboard charts, Frank Sinatra’s music can always be found on the jazz-specific rankings. While the art he created when he was still working was pop at the time, and later classified as traditional pop, there is no such list for the latter format in America, and so his throwback projects and cuts appear on jazz lists instead. It’s on those charts where Sinatra rebounds this week, and one of his popular projects returns not to one, but two tallies at the same time, helping him increase the total amount of real estate he owns at the moment. Frank Sinatra’s The World We Knew Returns Sinatra’s The World We Knew is a top performer again, if only on the jazz lists. That set rebounds to No. 15 on the Traditional Jazz Albums chart and comes in at No. 20 on the all-encompassing Jazz Albums ranking after not appearing on either roster just last frame. The World We Knew’s All-Time Highs The World We Knew returns close to its all-time peak on both of those rosters. Sinatra’s classic has peaked at No. 11 on the Traditional Jazz Albums chart, just missing out on becoming another top 10 for the crooner. The set climbed all the way to No. 15 on the Jazz Albums tally and has now spent just under two months on the rosters. Frank Sinatra’s Album With Classic Hits Sinatra released The World We Knew in the summer of 1967. The title track, which on the album is actually known as “The World We Knew (Over and…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 00:02