The recent ~$285M Drift Protocol exploit and ~$292M Kelp DAO drain, occurring within weeks of each other, reinforce a recurring pattern major losses are disproportionately concentrated in systems involving bridges, wrapped assets, or cross-chain execution layers. These components function under complex trust assumptions, and when any part of that chain fails, losses can scale rapidly into nine-figure territory.



This is not isolated to specific protocols. It reflects a broader architectural limitation in how value is transferred across chains today. While cross-chain systems enable interoperability, they also expand the attack surface by introducing additional custodial or validation dependencies.

$AXL has gained attention in this context due to its distributed validator architecture, which is designed to reduce reliance on single points of failure in cross-chain messaging. As security becomes a more dominant factor in capital allocation, protocols with more defensible architectures tend to attract increased interest during periods of heightened exploit activity.

From a user perspective, the implication is straightforward: every additional step in a transaction path wrapping, bridging, or custodial routing introduces incremental risk. Native execution within a single ecosystem reduces these dependencies and therefore reduces exposure to cross-system vulnerabilities.

Within the TON ecosystem, STONfi operates on this principle by enabling swaps without requiring external bridging layers. This minimizes intermediary trust assumptions and reduces the number of potential failure points between initiation and settlement.

As DeFi matures, security is increasingly defined not by feature complexity, but by the simplicity of execution paths. Fewer dependencies generally translate into fewer systemic risks.

#AXL #DeFi #TON #Gate13thAnniversaryLive #GatePreIPOsLaunchesWithSpaceX
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