Kyle Samani's Exit Scam, Is There More to the Story?

By: blockbeats|2026/02/10 23:00:00
0
Share
copy
Original Title: "Kyle Samani's Exit from the Scene, Is There Another Story?"
Original Author: Azuma, Odaily Planet Daily

It has only been a few days since Multicoin Capital co-founder Kyle Samani announced his exit from the scene, and the goodwill he has built up in the crypto industry over the years has been quickly eroded.

Burning Bridges After Crossing the River Is Truly Disgusting

Objectively speaking, Kyle Samani has made a positive contribution to the cryptocurrency industry over the years, whether it is tangible support for early projects (not discussing motivation, only function), or narrative guidance and ideological preaching at the level of consciousness, which has directly or indirectly influenced the industry's direction of progress.

From a consequentialist perspective, Kyle Samani has indeed achieved "great results" in the crypto industry that ordinary people can hardly imagine. So, whether Hasseb Qureshi says he is the "best investor in the industry" or Mable says he is a "top player," it is quite reasonable.

· Note: Hasseb Qureshi is a partner at Dragonfly Capital, who once said, "Investing is like a sport, and Kyle Samani is the all-time high scorer, unmatched by anyone"; Mable is a former partner at Multicoin Capital, co-founder of Trends, who wrote a popular article after Kyle Samani's exit, "The game is still on, just Kyle's version is over".

However, it is precisely because of this that Kyle Samani's frequent display of a "ugly face" after his exit has become even more disgusting.

First, on the day of his exit, Kyle Samani replied to Stix founder Taran, saying, "Cryptocurrency is not as interesting as many people (including myself) once imagined. I used to believe in the vision of Web3, believe in DApps, but now I don't. Blockchain is fundamentally an asset ledger, they will reshape finance, but that's about it, there won't be much more impact."

Kyle Samani's Exit Scam, Is There More to the Story?

This post was quickly deleted by Kyle Samani... Well, apparently this was a true thought that Kyle Samani had never revealed before, but knowing to delete the post at least means he knows that "burning bridges after crossing the river" is not decent.

Unfortunately, he did not stop there. On February 8, Kyle Samani once again took aim at the industry that had once propelled him: "Hyperliquid embodies almost every downside of cryptocurrency. The founder fled his own country to start it, openly facilitating crime and terrorist activities, keeping the system closed-source and permissioned."

While being outspoken has always been a controversial label attached to Kyle Samani, this time his illogical and clearly fact-defying "senseless rant" was evidently baseless. Moreover, having positioned himself as an outsider to the community, this statement seemed even more out of place. Previously, Kyle Samani's outrageous remarks could at least garner some group support based on his stance (like siding with Solana and long-term criticisms of Ethereum). However, this time, he stood outside the industry, completely denying the entire crypto space.

Unsurprisingly, Kyle Samani's actions have triggered industry-wide anger.

It is understandable when those who have lost money in the crypto world criticize it, as people often need to vent their emotions; but Kyle Samani, who clearly amassed immense wealth in the industry and climbed the social ladder, has now hypocritically turned to criticize it immediately after announcing his exit, which is hard not to find insincere and disgusting.

Frankly speaking, this is a typical case of "biting the hand that feeds you" — Kyle Samani wants to take away the benefits the industry has provided while eagerly distancing himself from it. How can anyone expect to gain such a big advantage?

A Strange Sense of Disharmony, Is There a Hidden Agenda Behind the Exit?

Another highly discordant point is that Kyle Samani chose to target Hyperliquid this time, while on the other hand, Multicoin Capital has been consistently increasing its bet on Hyperliquid.

Right in the same week as Kyle Samani's exit announcement, on-chain analyst MLM detected several large transactions suspected to be Multicoin Capital addresses buying significant amounts of HYPE.

Crypto Banter founder Ran Neuner also discovered that in Multicoin Capital co-founder Tushar Jain's investment themes for the next five years revealed over the weekend, Hyperliquid was prominently featured as the representative project for the third theme of "Financial Globalization," whereas DePIN, which Kyle Samani has been extremely bullish on, was not mentioned at all.

Ran Neuner has proposed a hypothesis that Kyle Samani did not resign voluntarily, but rather had a falling out with Tushar Jain, was eventually forced out, and had to leave the crypto industry only due to non-compete restrictions...

While this speculation lacks any factual evidence, it seems to better explain the earlier inconsistencies and Kyle Samani's sudden change in attitude—would you rather believe that a seasoned mind in the crypto industry suddenly realized the industry's futility, or that Kyle Samani simply turned his back out of resentment and an inability to profit from the industry anymore?

Whether out of faith in the industry's future or residual recognition of Kyle Samani's past achievements, I would emotionally lean towards the latter possibility. As for the truth of the matter, it may only be revealed one day in the future when no one cares about this anymore.

Does the Crypto Industry Have No Future?

Over the past few years, we have seen too many talents flow from the crypto world to the AI world, but when iconic figures like Kyle Samani choose to exit, it deals a heavy blow to the entire crypto industry's confidence.

So does the industry really have no future? This is clearly not a question that can be answered from a personal perspective. After Kyle Samani's departure, several other prominent opinion leaders, equivalent to him, have explained with their own logic why they continue to be optimistic about the industry's future.

Tushar Jain's faith remains strong, and the eight core investment themes announced by Multicoin Capital still focus on the crypto world.

Haseeb Qureshi believes that Kyle Samani's departure is the most authentic sign of the industry's maturation, as pioneers and settlers are often not the same group of people, a rule dictated by human nature — "I still remain very bullish on cryptocurrency. I know it sounds strange to say this in a volatile market because people are running out of patience for dreams that won't be fulfilled for another ten years. The era of dreamers is over, but the era of doers is coming, which is neither good nor bad in itself."

Chris Dixon, a partner at a16z Crypto and a pioneer of the Web3 concept, analogized the development pattern of the internet to refute Kyle Samani's view that cryptocurrency can only reshape finance — "Infrastructure and distribution networks often precede new application categories. The internet did not begin with social media, streaming, or online communities but with packet switching, TCP/IP, and basic connectivity. It was only after billions of people were online that entirely new cultural and economic categories emerged. Cryptocurrency is likely to follow a similar path. A reasonable guess is that we need to onboard billions of people through financial applications like payments, stablecoins, savings, and DeFi before meaningful adoption can be seen in media, gaming, AI, or other potentially more distant fields."

The future is created by humans, and as long as more people hold the same consensus, the flame of the crypto narrative can be reignited.

Original Article Link

You may also like

Popular coins

Latest Crypto News

Read more