【BitPush】Can a crypto project truly fully recover after a hacker attack? According to the latest data from the Web3 security platform, the answer might disappoint you—nearly 80% of projects that experienced major hacking incidents have never truly emerged from the shadow.
It sounds a bit heartbreaking, but the key issue isn’t the stolen funds themselves. What is truly deadly? It’s the chaos during the response process. Most protocols collapsed immediately upon discovering the vulnerability because they had no contingency plans. What does lacking an emergency plan mean? Additional losses, trust collapse, and user attrition.
Looking at the data for 2025 makes it clear—the entire industry has suffered a total loss of $3.4 billion due to hacking attacks, the highest since 2022. Even more heartbreaking is that three major cases account for 69% of this, including a $1.4 billion incident involving a leading exchange. In other words, concentrated outbreak risks are intensifying.
What does this indicate? The gap between projects with defensive awareness and those without is widening. Establishing emergency mechanisms, formulating crisis plans, and maintaining transparent communication—these seemingly basic elements are becoming the dividing line for whether a project can survive.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
7 Likes
Reward
7
6
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
DAOdreamer
· 6h ago
It's better to say that it was not hacked, but rather died due to the lack of an emergency plan, truly.
View OriginalReply0
FlashLoanPhantom
· 6h ago
Emergency plans have really been overlooked. Wake up, everyone.
View OriginalReply0
PriceOracleFairy
· 6h ago
ngl the real killer here is always the comms breakdown, not the actual exploit. watched too many protocols just implode because they had zero playbook ready to deploy 💀
Reply0
SwapWhisperer
· 6h ago
80% of projects that fail, the money is gone, really. Losing trust is even more painful than being robbed.
View OriginalReply0
zkNoob
· 6h ago
Without an emergency plan, you're just waiting to die. Hackers don't even need to strike; it will collapse on its own.
View OriginalReply0
Whale_Whisperer
· 6h ago
Damn, 80% can't turn things around? That's why I don't dare to touch new projects anymore... Once trust is broken, it's more deadly than being robbed of money.
80% of crypto projects cannot recover after hacking; the real killer is not financial loss.
【BitPush】Can a crypto project truly fully recover after a hacker attack? According to the latest data from the Web3 security platform, the answer might disappoint you—nearly 80% of projects that experienced major hacking incidents have never truly emerged from the shadow.
It sounds a bit heartbreaking, but the key issue isn’t the stolen funds themselves. What is truly deadly? It’s the chaos during the response process. Most protocols collapsed immediately upon discovering the vulnerability because they had no contingency plans. What does lacking an emergency plan mean? Additional losses, trust collapse, and user attrition.
Looking at the data for 2025 makes it clear—the entire industry has suffered a total loss of $3.4 billion due to hacking attacks, the highest since 2022. Even more heartbreaking is that three major cases account for 69% of this, including a $1.4 billion incident involving a leading exchange. In other words, concentrated outbreak risks are intensifying.
What does this indicate? The gap between projects with defensive awareness and those without is widening. Establishing emergency mechanisms, formulating crisis plans, and maintaining transparent communication—these seemingly basic elements are becoming the dividing line for whether a project can survive.