Disclosure: The views and opinions expressed herein belong solely to the authors and do not represent the views and opinions of crypto.news editorials.
As cryptocurrencies mature, it becomes increasingly difficult to ignore one of the industry’s biggest illusions. That is, users are not economically free if their assets are locked within a single blockchain. This means the industry still has work to do to realize the promise of freedom.
summary
Asset ownership is not free without mobility. Siled blockchains capture users, limit their ability to move capital, and act on opportunities across the broader ecosystem. Fragmentation creates inefficiency and tribalism. Isolated chains raise cognitive and technical barriers, concentrate profits among power users, and reproduce the same constraints seen in traditional finance. True freedom requires decentralized and seamless interoperability. Centralized bridges increase risk, but industry-wide abstracted cross-chain standards are essential to unlocking the potential of Web3.
From the outside, web3 promises openness, sovereignty, and permission-free access. But in reality, many ecosystems are defined by invisible boundaries. Each blockchain behaves like a siled jurisdiction with its own rules, standards, liquidity pools, and tools. Once users enter one of these ecosystems, they often find it difficult, risky, and tiring to leave. That is the exact opposite of the idea of economic freedom.
True financial freedom means open and seamless access. This means assets can be moved freely across the broader ecosystem. Currently, fragmentation prevents that. Isolated chains, incompatible standards, and siled liquidity limit users and limit how capital can be used. Ownership alone does not equate to freedom if users lack the practical ability to act upon opportunities.
Fragmentation and network tribalism
The irony is that web3 reproduces many of the same structural limitations found in traditional finance. Fragmentation of both systems not only limits agency and creates artificial barriers, but also forces reliance on intermediaries. In traditional finance, these barriers are legal and institutional. With Web3, the results are similar, albeit technical and cognitive.
Fragmentation limits participation and yield optimization. Users are often forced to settle for suboptimal results simply because accessing other on-chain alternatives requires significant effort, expertise, or risk. Even a single blockchain can be complex to operate. Multiply that complexity across dozens of chains, each with different wallets, bridges, and fee models, and it becomes overwhelming. If users cannot rationally understand or interact with a system, their ability to act rationally is impaired.
Financial freedom is more than just owning assets. It’s about having the unlimited ability to deploy and leverage those assets wherever the opportunity presents itself. Fragmentation prevents most participants from accessing that functionality.
This fragmentation also fosters network tribalism. When each chain is positioned as the only “correct” chain, capital and talent become bogged down. Liquidity remains siled. Developers build inward, not outward. Users are discouraged from looking for better opportunities elsewhere, even when such opportunities clearly exist.
Importantly, this tribalism is not ideological in nature. It’s a structural thing. This happens because the networks are separated. Tribalism will naturally decrease if blockchain works as part of a larger, interoperable system. Competing incentives will still exist, but the zero-sum framework will weaken. Innovation thrives when ideas, capital, and users can move freely.
Currently, the benefits of cross-chain activity accrue disproportionately to high-capacity users. Those with the time, knowledge, and risk tolerance to overcome fragmentation will be rewarded. All others are effectively excluded.
True interoperability raises the floor, not the ceiling. Reduce systemic bias by lowering cognitive and operational barriers to participation. Capability is always important, but seamless interoperability ensures that access itself is no longer restricted to the technical elite.
Why a centralized bridge is not the solution
Attempting to resolve fragmentation through a centralized bridge comes with its own risks. Centralized bridges create single points of failure, expose users to vendor lock-in, and remain vulnerable to regulatory intervention. These often reproduce the very shortcomings of traditional finance: asking users to trust an opaque system while centralizing control in a single entity.
While these solutions may reduce surface-level friction, they ultimately exacerbate the risks. If a bridge fails, users are exposed to the loss of the entire system. Economic freedom cannot rest on an infrastructure that crumbles under centralized pressure.
Decentralization is not an ideological preference. This is a safety requirement. Eliminating single points of failure reduces system risk and limits the ability of a single attacker to exert large-scale control over user assets. A well-designed decentralized infrastructure reduces the need for vendor lock-in and reduces the impact of regulatory and operational shocks.
But decentralization alone is not enough. It must be combined with seamless, abstracted interoperability. The goal is not to make every user an expert in how cross-chain works, but to completely eliminate the need for that expertise.
the way to go
If the industry fails to break through chain-level boundaries, blockchain adoption will remain limited to niche applications. While these may still be large in absolute terms, like international remittances, the broader promise of a universal financial system remains unrealized.
If the industry succeeds, the impact will be even more profound. Blockchain technology has the potential to underpin global financial coordination and enable open access to capital, opportunity, and innovation at scale. The results are not guaranteed. Nothing is promised.
Imagine if your Internet router could only communicate with other routers from the same manufacturer. That is effectively web3’s position today. Therefore, the solution is not a single product or protocol. It requires industry-wide standards. Competing interoperability solutions must themselves find ways to achieve interoperability. Otherwise, the industry will not be able to deliver on its promises.
Financial freedom is a choice. Your choice will depend on your mobility. Until assets can move freely between blockchains without friction, web3 continues to promise freedom without delivering it.
