The tools with the greatest potential for user empowerment can be among the hardest to use. Ideology isn’t onboarding new users; a clean UX is.The tools with the greatest potential for user empowerment can be among the hardest to use. Ideology isn’t onboarding new users; a clean UX is.

UX is the killer app for mass adoption in web3 | Opinion

7 min read

Disclosure: The views and opinions expressed here belong solely to the author and do not represent the views and opinions of crypto.news’ editorial.

When FTX collapsed in 2022, it didn’t just vaporize billions of dollars in customer funds; the exchange’s implosion shattered confidence in the centralized architecture in much of the crypto economy. And with court battles still ongoing in 2025, including plans to return $1.9 billion in disputed claims, it’s a reminder that trusting middlemen in a trustless ecosystem can be a risky contradiction. 

Summary
  • The self-custody market is surging post-FTX, projected to grow from $1.5B in 2023 to $8.4B by 2032, driven by both institutions and retail users.
  • On-chain data shows users shifting from centralized exchanges to DEXs, with spot volumes falling 16.3% while DEX activity rose 6.2% in early 2025.
  • UX remains the industry’s bottleneck — wallets and dApps often confuse users with jargon, poor recovery, and hidden centralization.
  • Fiat-to-crypto on-ramps are crypto’s front door; smooth, compliant rails are essential for adoption and trust.
  • The next 100M users will come not from new protocols but from an intuitive, safe, and invisible design that makes web3 feel seamless.

In the aftermath of FTX’s collapse in 2023, the self-custody market was already worth $1.5 billion and projected to hit $8.4 billion by 2032. This wasn’t just a temporary response to the crisis; it signaled a deeper shift in people’s mindset. Users wanted tools that put them in control.

It is perhaps no surprise that users are seeking to reclaim control. Many have moved their assets to non-custodial wallets, seeking safety in their own personal responsibility where they can hold their own keys and shoulder their own risk.

The numbers behind a behavioural shift

Spot trading volume at the top ten centralized exchanges decreased by 16.3% quarter-on-quarter from $6.5 trillion in Q4, 2024, to $5.4 trillion in Q1, 2025. Meanwhile, volume on the top 10 DEXs increased by 6.2% over the same period, recording a total of $700.7 billion in Q1, 2025, up from $660 billion in Q4, 2024, according to CoinGecko. On-chain data clearly shows a growing appetite for self-custody, and long-term holders are accumulating over 19,000 bitcoin each month, according to Glassnode.

This is no longer a panic. According to Chainalysis, the uptick now includes both institutions and retail users shifting to self-custody by choice. They aren’t guided by fear; they’re seeking control, transparency, and autonomy.

The narrative is no longer about bank runs. It’s about a new paradigm where crypto users are designing trust out of the equation altogether. But in escaping trust-based systems, many users have collided with a new kind of barrier: design complexity. Self-custody may promise autonomy, but for the average user, it can deliver confusion. If 2022 was the year people woke up to the risks of centralization, the reality in 2025 still shows a usability gap at the heart of crypto’s most important tools.

What began as a migration of assets has become a stress test for the industry’s design priorities. And many wallets, dApps, and protocols still aren’t quite ready for the next wave of users now holding their own keys.

What most crypto teams still get wrong about UX

But while the shift to self-custody is accelerating, crypto’s front-end still lags behind its promise. For all the innovation under the hood, most wallets and dApps can, to the uninitiated, seem built more for insiders rather than everyday users.

Recovery processes can be unforgiving. Jargon is rampant, and interfaces can still feel like puzzles. A 2024 usability study found that users can struggle to perform even basic wallet functions due to unclear instructions and unfamiliar design patterns, highlighting a significant disconnect between technical design and real-world comprehension.

Too many DeFi protocols still prioritize token mechanics over user flows, treating UX like a coat of paint on a protocol, not a fundamental design challenge. Even worse, some self-custody tools lean heavily on centralized Remote Procedure Call providers or default to cloud backups that give users a false sense of control. Research shows that despite blockchain’s promise of decentralization, users often still depend on centralized trust anchors like leading infrastructure services, contradicting blockchain’s fundamental promise of trustless interactions.

UX and on-ramps are crypto’s front door

Here’s the irony: the tools with the greatest potential for user empowerment can be among the hardest to use. Ideology isn’t onboarding new users; a clean UX is. Winning products aren’t just shipping new features; they’re rethinking how crypto should feel. But before users can benefit from great UX, they have to get into the ecosystem in the first place. That’s where the fiat-to-crypto bridge becomes essential. 

Fiat on-ramps are the front door to web3. They shape the first impression. If they’re slow, confusing, or require too much technical knowledge, users may never return. A smooth, compliant on-ramp doesn’t just help users obtain access to crypto; it builds trust from the first click. That’s why the infrastructure layer between traditional finance and digital assets matters so much. The most successful wallets and dApps often owe their growth not only to smart features, but to well-integrated fiat access.

Seamless, KYC-compliant payment rails are helping to power this transition, enabling users to obtain access to cryptocurrency using a bank debit or credit card, or seamless services such as Apple Pay and Google Pay. This kind of infrastructure is what lays the foundation for scalable, real-world adoption that meets users in familiar environments before guiding them into self-custody.

MetaMask is making strides with built-in swaps and bridging, cutting down the app-hopping that once defined DeFi. Wallets such as Trust Wallet have embraced intuitive app design, offering features like biometric login, in-app swaps, and seamless browser extensions, in a way that some might say mimics what has worked so well for TradFi apps for years. Originally launched in 2017, Trust Wallet’s usability has helped drive the wallet to over 17 million monthly active users and more than 200 million total downloads as of 2025. But as strong as the tools themselves are, it’s the entry point that defines the journey.

Decentralization was never binary

If better UX is lowering the barrier to self-custody, it’s also exposing a deeper truth: many users aren’t evangelists for pure decentralization. They want systems that feel safe, clear, and reliable, even if that can mean accepting some trade-offs.

Great UX doesn’t mean dumbing crypto down. It’s about communicating risk, surfacing trust signals, and creating confidence even when the backend is messy. You shouldn’t have to decode hex strings to verify transactions. Interfaces should surface risk and intent clearly, guide users through recovery safely, and give you the confidence of feeling in control even when the backend infrastructure is shared. That’s the trust design challenge that crypto has yet to fully embrace.

The next 100 million users

The next 100 million users won’t show up for a new chain or a novel protocol. They’ll come when wallets are impossible to misplace, when dApps speak a human language instead of a protocol code, and when safety becomes hardwired into the applications. Crypto began as a rebellion against trust, but for the industry to scale, it needs to feel trustworthy. That’s not a scalability problem.

For the industry to scale, it must confront two realities: people believe in decentralization as an idea, but demand usability as a condition. The winners of the next cycle won’t be the most permissionless or most programmable; they’ll be the ones who make web3 invisible. That means building seamless fiat-to-crypto gateways, intuitive self-custody tools, and apps that meet users where they are today.

Petr Kozyakov
Petr Kozyakov

Petr Kozyakov is the co-founder and CEO of Mercuryo, a payments infrastructure platform. With over 10 years of experience in the payments industry, Petr is a tech leader who excels at strategic development and possesses an innate ability to see the big picture: the confluence of micro-trends that are mainstreaming the adoption of crypto payments.

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Photo by Pierre Borthiry - Peiobty on Unsplash Cryptocurrency APIs are essential tools for developers building apps (e.g. trading bots, portfolio trackers) and for analysts conducting market research. These APIs provide programmatic access to historical price data, real-time market quotes, and even on-chain metrics from blockchain networks. Choosing the right API means finding a balance between data coverage, update speed, reliability, and cost. In this article, we compare five of the most popular crypto data API providers — EODHD, CoinMarketCap, CoinGecko, CryptoCompare, and Glassnode — focusing on their features, data types (historical, real-time, on-chain), rate limits, documentation, and pricing plans. We also highlight where EODHD’s crypto API stands out in this competitive landscape. Overview of the Top 5 Crypto Data API Providers
  1. EODHD (End-of-Day Historical Data) — All-in-One Multi-Asset Data EODHD is a versatile financial data provider covering stocks, forex, and cryptocurrencies. It offers an unmatched data coverage with up to 30 years of historical data across the global For crypto, EODHD supports thousands of coins and trading pairs (2,600+ crypto pairs against USD) and provides multiple data types under one service. Key features include:
Historical Price Data: Daily OHLCV (open-high-low-close-volume) for crypto assets, with records for major coins going back to 2009 eodhd.com (essentially as far back as Bitcoin’s history). This extensive archive facilitates long-term backtesting. Real-Time Market Data: Live crypto price quotes via REST API and WebSocket. EODHD’s “Live” plan delivers real-time (typically streaming) updates with high rate limits (up to 1,000 requests/minute on paid plans) Developers can also use bulk API endpoints to On-Chain & Fundamental Data: While not an on-chain analytics platform per se, EODHD provides crypto fundamental metrics such as market cap (actual and diluted), circulating/total/max supply, all-time high/low, and links to each project’s whitepaper, block explorer These fundamentals give context beyond price, though advanced on-chain metrics (e.g. active addresses) are not included. Additional Features: EODHD stands out for its ease of use and support tools. API responses are clean JSON by default (with an option for CSV), and the service offers no-code solutions like Excel and Google Sheets add-ons to fetch crypto data without programming Comprehensive documentation and an “API Academy” with examples help users get started EODHD also provides 24/7 live customer support, reflecting its 7+ years of reliable service Pricing & Limits: EODHD’s pricing is very competitive for the value. It has a free plan (registration required) which allows 20 API calls per day for trying out basic Paid plans start at $19.99/month for end-of-day and live crypto data, allowing up to 100,000 calls per day— a generous limit that far exceeds most competitors at that price. The next tier ($29.99/mo) adds real-time WebSocket streaming, and the top All-in-One plan ($99.99/mo) unlocks everything (historical, intraday, real-time, fundamentals, news, etc.) All paid plans come with high throughput (up to 1,000 requests/min) Enterprise or commercial licenses are available for custom needs, and students can even get 50% discounts for educational Overall, EODHD offers an excellent price-to-performance ratio, giving developers extensive crypto (and cross-asset) data for a fraction of the cost of some single-purpose crypto APIs. 2. CoinMarketCap — Industry-Standard Market Data CoinMarketCap (CMC) is one of the most well-known cryptocurrency data aggregators. It provides information on over 10,000 digital assets and aggregates data from hundreds of CMC’s API is a go-to choice for current market prices, rankings, and exchange statistics. Key features include: Real-Time Quotes & Global Metrics: The API offers real-time price quotes, market capitalization, trading volume, and rankings for thousands of cryptocurrencies. It also provides global market metrics like total market cap, total volume, Bitcoin dominance, etc., updated (CMC’s data updates roughly every 1–2 minutes by default; true streaming is not yet available via their API.) Historical Data: Paid tiers unlock access to historical price data. CMC has data going back to 2013 for many assets, and enterprise plans provide all historical OHLCV data since 2013.The API endpoints include daily and even intraday historical quotes, but note that the free tier does not include historical price retrieval(free users get only latest data). Exchange and Market Endpoints: CoinMarketCap’s API covers exchange-level data (e.g. exchange listings, trading pair metadata, liquidity scores) and derivative market data (futures, options prices) on higher plans. 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The Hobbyist plan starts at around $29/month (paid annually) and offers a higher monthly call allowance (e.g. ~50,000 calls/month) and more endpoints. Mid-tier plans like Startup ($79/mo) and Standard ($199/mo) increase the rate limits and data access — e.g., more historical data and additional endpoints like derivatives or exchange listings. For example, Standard and above allow intraday historical quotes and more frequent updates. Professional/Enterprise plans ($699/mo and up, or custom) provide the highest limits (up to millions of calls per month), full historical datasets, and SLA . Rate limits on CMC are enforced via a credit system; different endpoints consume different credits, and higher plans simply grant more credits per month. In summary, CoinMarketCap’s API is very robust but can become expensive for extensive data needs — it targets enterprise use cases with its upper tiers. 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