【ChainWen】The cryptocurrency industry is about to enter a new phase. According to the latest outlook report from top crypto investment institutions, the industry development starting in 2025 will no longer focus on the speed of blockchain emergence, but on who can truly utilize this technology—reshaping markets, innovating computing infrastructure, and transforming media ecosystems.
Simply put, it’s shifting from “creating new things” to “making good use of existing ones.” How will this change manifest? The report highlights three directions.
The first is the predicted explosion of the market. As the size of prediction markets grows, advances in cryptography, AI, and market design open up many new possibilities for this sector. By 2026, prediction markets will not only become larger and more widespread but also more complex in their business models—you’ll see more innovative contract designs and smarter ways to solve the ultimate question of “who is right.” Especially with real money entering the scene, the definition of trust is changing.
The second is the infiltration of zero-knowledge proofs into traditional industries. This technology is experiencing significant cost reductions. Generating a proof used to be extremely expensive, but it’s becoming increasingly affordable. 2026 may be a turning point—advances in zero-knowledge virtual machines will make verifiable computation from cloud servers to consumer-grade devices a reality. Cryptographic proofs will flow from blockchain into enterprise systems and computing infrastructure, becoming foundational infrastructure rather than flashy applications.
The third is the rise of “Staking Media.” In this model, content creators, analysts, and commentators are no longer just talking—they make publicly verifiable commitments using cryptographic tools—“staking” their money or reputation. Tokens, smart lockups, and on-chain historical records work together to enable participants to prove their credibility by bearing real capital or reputation risks. Audiences can see clearly and even audit these claims. This is a new attempt to align incentive mechanisms with actual propositions.
Overall, the industry has moved beyond “what is blockchain” to “how to use blockchain.”
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.
10 Likes
Reward
10
5
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
PumpBeforeRug
· 01-09 12:15
Honestly, shifting from creating new things to making good use of existing ones is a bit late. Predicting a market explosion? It feels like we've been speculating for so many years, and only a few top players are truly making money.
View OriginalReply0
GasWastingMaximalist
· 01-09 12:04
From creating new things to making good use of existing ones—it's easy to say, but who is really using them... The prediction market is probably about to hype up again.
View OriginalReply0
MEVHunterX
· 01-09 12:02
Sounds nice, but isn't it just another scheme to harvest retail investors... After all these years of prediction markets being popular, the real profit still goes to those few big players, right?
View OriginalReply0
ConsensusBot
· 01-09 12:01
Sounds pretty right. From creation to usage is a mature process. But can the prediction market really explode? It still seems to depend on whether a killer app appears.
View OriginalReply0
nft_widow
· 01-09 11:50
That's a good point, but can prediction markets really be implemented? It still feels too theoretical.
The three major highlights of the 2026 crypto industry: prediction markets, zero-knowledge proofs, and staking media
【ChainWen】The cryptocurrency industry is about to enter a new phase. According to the latest outlook report from top crypto investment institutions, the industry development starting in 2025 will no longer focus on the speed of blockchain emergence, but on who can truly utilize this technology—reshaping markets, innovating computing infrastructure, and transforming media ecosystems.
Simply put, it’s shifting from “creating new things” to “making good use of existing ones.” How will this change manifest? The report highlights three directions.
The first is the predicted explosion of the market. As the size of prediction markets grows, advances in cryptography, AI, and market design open up many new possibilities for this sector. By 2026, prediction markets will not only become larger and more widespread but also more complex in their business models—you’ll see more innovative contract designs and smarter ways to solve the ultimate question of “who is right.” Especially with real money entering the scene, the definition of trust is changing.
The second is the infiltration of zero-knowledge proofs into traditional industries. This technology is experiencing significant cost reductions. Generating a proof used to be extremely expensive, but it’s becoming increasingly affordable. 2026 may be a turning point—advances in zero-knowledge virtual machines will make verifiable computation from cloud servers to consumer-grade devices a reality. Cryptographic proofs will flow from blockchain into enterprise systems and computing infrastructure, becoming foundational infrastructure rather than flashy applications.
The third is the rise of “Staking Media.” In this model, content creators, analysts, and commentators are no longer just talking—they make publicly verifiable commitments using cryptographic tools—“staking” their money or reputation. Tokens, smart lockups, and on-chain historical records work together to enable participants to prove their credibility by bearing real capital or reputation risks. Audiences can see clearly and even audit these claims. This is a new attempt to align incentive mechanisms with actual propositions.
Overall, the industry has moved beyond “what is blockchain” to “how to use blockchain.”