Key Takeaways
CrediX’s disappearance following a $4.5 million exploit has raised serious rug pull concerns. Meanwhile, NFT platforms have overtaken DeFi in daily user activity; a shift in market behavior even as overall NFT volumes remain well below 2021 highs.
CrediX has become the latest cautionary tale in DeFi after a $4.5 million exploit left users stranded and the team seemingly vanished.
The incident, which has all the hallmarks of a rug pull, comes as the wider DeFi and NFT markets boom – though shifting user habits suggest the next phase of growth may look very different.
An exploit turned into silence
What began as a routine security breach has now escalated into what many believe is a full-blown exit scam.
On the 4th of August, CrediX suffered an exploit that drained roughly $4.5 million from its pools. The team initially promised reimbursements within 24-48 hours, but those assurances never materialized.
Instead, the project’s website and social media channels went offline, leaving users without answers.
Data shows that about $400,000 of the stolen funds was funneled through Tornado Cash, while the rest remains in private wallets.
Although there’s no definitive proof that CrediX orchestrated the hack, its disappearance has caused doubts.
Adding to the risk, some non-custodial platforms still list CrediX pool tokens without warnings, potentially exposing more traders to losses.
NFTs outpace DeFi in user engagement
July saw record liquidity in DeFi, with total value locked hitting $270 billion (a 30% monthly jump).
But the bigger story was NFTs taking the lead in user activity.
DappRadar data shows 3.85 million Daily Active Wallets engaged with NFT DApps, slightly more than in DeFi. NFT trading volumes surged 96% to $530 million, while average prices doubled to $105.
Ethereum [ETH] marketplace Blur captured up to 80% of daily NFT volume, OpenSea led with 27,000 Active Traders, and Zora gained traction with low-cost minting tools.
Luxury brands like Louis Vuitton and Rolex joined Nike and Coca-Cola in NFT pilots, while interest in legacy collections like CryptoPunks spiked, accounting for nine of the top ten sales in the past day.
NFT recovery still trails 2021 highs
July’s bounce has not erased the broader slowdown in NFTs.
2024 trading volumes fell 19% year-on-year, while sales counts slid 18%, making it one of the weakest years since 2020. CryptoSlam figures for H1 2025 put total sales at $2.82 billion – down 4.6% from late 2024.
Even with July’s sharp rise in activity and floor prices, the market remains far from its 2021 peak, when monthly volumes reached tens of billions.
The recovery is real, but the boom that once defined the NFT boom is still a long way off.