The fundamental transformation in crypto VC is not the “disappearance of capital,” but rather the “transfer of capital pricing power.” In the previous expansion cycle, the prevailing market logic was: fundraising completion, narrative expansion, token launch, and liquidity realization. This sequence operated seamlessly in high-liquidity environments, with institutional returns significantly benefiting from cyclical tailwinds. The current shift is that this chain is no longer a stable closed loop, and the industry has moved from an “opportunity-rich period” into a “phase of attribution assessment.”
Attribution assessment centers on a critical question: given the same capital deployment, which returns are driven by market conditions, and which are a result of institutional capability? When this question becomes mainstream, industry valuations, fundraising terms, post-investment roles, and exit strategies are all subject to fundamental revision.
The evolution of crypto VC can be summarized in three distinct phases:
Currently, crypto VCs are in the third phase. This stage is marked not by broad contraction, but by pronounced divergence: leading capability-driven and resource-based platform institutions are gaining share, while narrative-driven and undifferentiated institutions are being marginalized.
High-quality projects now face fewer barriers to raising capital, but the bar for “high-quality capital” is much higher.
Founding teams increasingly prioritize three incremental factors:
As a result, the capital provider’s role is being replaced by “capability providers,” diminishing the advantage of traditional relationships.

The market’s tolerance for “high valuation – low realization” portfolios is decreasing.
Valuation anchors are undergoing a substantial shift:
Valuation methods haven’t fully reverted to traditional models, but discounting logic is now far more rational.
Token exits remain, but their certainty and efficiency are declining.
Three new industry phenomena have emerged:
As a result, institutions can no longer rely on a single exit pathway—they must design multi-path exit strategies.
Top projects now have multiple fundraising options, including community-driven growth, self-sustaining revenues, and cross-sector capital partnerships.
VCs have shifted from “selectors” to “competitors,” and must now prove their value.
Traditional FinTech, growth funds, and industrial capital are making inroads into payments, compliance infrastructure, data services, and trading technology. The information asymmetry advantage of crypto-native institutions is shrinking, shifting competition from within the sector to across sectors.
LPs are less tolerant of volatility and demand greater transparency and attribution clarity.
“High volatility + low explainability” strategies are finding it harder to raise new funds, and fund management has become more challenging.
Where “brand endorsement” once carried symbolic weight, the focus has shifted to verifiable outcomes:
Small and mid-sized institutions face the dual challenge of insufficient research breadth and post-investment depth.
With industry cycles lengthening, organizational endurance is now a critical survival factor.
Today’s environment favors a “multi-layered valuation framework” over single-narrative pricing. Project value can be broken down into four layers:
Discount rates for the governance and capital layers are clearly rising. The market no longer assumes “revenue equals valuation,” but asks, “can revenue translate into asset value?”
This explains why many projects are experiencing greater valuation volatility: business metrics may improve, but unclear value capture mechanisms keep discount rates high.
The future landscape will likely feature a few leading platforms, a group of specialized vertical institutions, and a large number of passive clearances.
The industry will not disappear, but the survival threshold for median institutions will continue to rise.
In today’s market, the core competitiveness of crypto VC is not about capital provision, but about consistently delivering incremental value at key stages and institutionalizing it as reusable organizational capability. The dividing line is shifting from capital scale to capability density.
This restructuring is most evident in five areas:
Only when these capabilities are consistently quantifiable, standardized, and reusable across projects do institutions gain true cross-cycle competitiveness. The industry’s future core differentiator will be systematic delivery capability, not short-term capital access.
To assess the future state of crypto VC, monitor the following indicators:
If these variables continue to evolve, the industry will shift further from “capital-driven” to “capability-driven.”
“It’s the end of crypto VC” is not an accurate assessment. A better judgment is that the old model is fading, and the new model is still taking shape.
In the next phase, what truly determines an institution’s fate is not assets under management or social presence, but three things:
The current state of crypto VC can be summarized as high pressure, divergence, and restructuring coexisting.
This is both a period of elimination and rebuilding. Institutions that can transition from “capital intermediary” to “capability platform” will still have the opportunity to occupy core positions in the next cycle.





