Why Web3 Domains Died: Crypto’s Failed Naming Revolution
Why Died: Crypto’s Failed Naming Revolution
In the wild world of crypto, big promises come and go. One of the biggest was
What Were Supposed to Do?
The hype was huge. Marketers said browsers would soon support them natively. People rushed to buy. Prices soared. It felt like the future.
But reality hit hard. Most browsers still don’t resolve these names. You need special apps or extensions. Without easy access, no one uses them for real websites.
The Big Pivot: Unstoppable Domains Gives Up
This week, Unstoppable Domains’ CEO shared the truth. The company is shifting to traditional .com and .io names. Web3 names? They’re now a side project for crypto fans only.
“Web3 only domains were part of the crypto craze in 2021 but did not cross the chasm into mainstream usage.”
Owners of these domains got mad. They called it a betrayal. But the CEO had hinted at this for over a year. It’s not a surprise—it’s just business.
Others are bailing too. Namecheap dumped its Handshake tools. Most sellers hide Web3 options deep in their sites. The dream is over.
The Chicken-and-Egg Problem That Killed
Why did they fail? It’s simple: distribution. For a domain to work, people must visit it easily. But browsers stick to the old DNS system run by ICANN. Alt-roots like Handshake or ENS need their own networks.
It’s a trap:
- No sites on the domain = no reason for browsers to support it.
- No browser support = no one builds sites.
We’ve seen this before. In the 90s and 2000s, alt-root domains tried to break free. They all flopped. Blockchain didn’t change the math.
Niche Use Cases Don’t Save the Day
Web3 domains had one trick: wallet aliases. Send crypto to “bob.eth” instead of 0x123abc…. Cool for traders. But even that’s niche.
Now, regular domains do it too. ENS links to .com names. Brave browser and some wallets support Web2 domains as aliases. You get the perks without the hassle.
People Want Simple, Not Decentralized
Humans love consistency. One system everyone uses. Rules that work. Central control feels safe.
Decentralization sounds great until your site won’t load for grandma. Web3 domains ignored that. They fought over tech flaws at conferences but missed the big picture: benefits don’t beat the pain.
Investor Tears and Bag-Pumping
Buyers feel burned. Some yell “rug pull!” But it’s not fraud—it’s a bad bet. Crypto peaked in 2021. Hype sold domains. Reality killed them.
Many still pump their holdings on social media. Classic crypto move. Own your losses. Learn. Move on.
Lessons from the Graveyard
- Tech alone isn’t enough. Blockchain adds features, but usability wins.
- Adopt or die. Mainstream needs browser buy-in. None came.
- Hype fades. 2021 was a bubble. Sustainable growth matters more.
- Hybrids work best. Blend Web2 reliability with Web3 perks.
What’s Next for Domains in Crypto?
The future isn’t all doom. Traditional domains evolve. Registrars add wallet links. Opera and Brave support crypto payments on .com sites.
Web3 might live in wallets and dApps. But for websites? Stick to .com.
If you’re in crypto, grab a short .com now. Link it to ENS or Unstoppable. Best of both worlds.
Final Thoughts: Time to Bury
Blockchain changes money and apps. But the web? It’s sticking to what works. Investors, take note. Bet on adoption, not just tech.
What’s your take? Did you buy a Web3 domain? Share in the comments.
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