2025 in Review: Partnerships and Integrations
It has been a year of robust growth, featuring **36 dApp integrations** and **19 blockchain deployments**. We also successfully launched the **DIA Oracle Grants** in cooperation with **20+ leading chains**.
DIA has expanded its footprint across **DeFi, RWAs, AI, gaming**, and **infrastructure layers**.
Here is a look at how the network grew 🧵
Let me talk about Walrus in a way I’d normally talk to you all in chat, not like an article or a pitch.
Most of Web3 loves to talk about decentralization, but very few people stop and ask where the actual data is sitting. Not the transactions, not the balances, but the real stuff apps depend on. Files. Content. App data. History. In a lot of cases, that data still lives on centralized servers. If those servers go down, get censored, or just disappear, the app suffers. Sometimes it completely breaks.
That’s the problem Walrus is focused on.
Walrus is about making sure data doesn’t quietly become the weak point of Web3. Instead of storing everything in one place, it spreads data across a decentralized network. No single owner. No single server. No easy shutdown. It’s not trying to reinvent everything, it’s just fixing something blockchains were never designed to handle well.
What I personally like is how grounded the approach feels. Walrus isn’t trying to sell a dream. It’s solving a boring problem, and boring problems are usually the ones that matter the most. Storage is invisible when it works, and a disaster when it doesn’t.
Another thing worth mentioning is trust. With Walrus, data isn’t just stored, it can be checked. Apps don’t have to blindly trust a server and hope nothing changed. They can verify that what they’re using is still the same data that was originally stored.
Walrus isn’t loud, and it probably won’t trend every day. But if Web3 is serious about ownership and long-term systems, decentralized storage has to be real. Walrus feels like it’s quietly doing that work, and honestly, that’s why it stands out.
@WalrusProtocol $WAL #walrus
The crypto space is crowded with projects making bold promises. WAL is different; it's already delivering on decentralized infrastructure that works.
Walrus addresses one of blockchain's fundamental challenges: truly decentralized data storage. Unlike centralized cloud providers, where your data sits on servers controlled by one company, Walrus distributes information across a network of independent storage providers. This architecture ensures no single entity controls access to your data.
The tokenomics create a self-sustaining ecosystem. Providers must stake WAL to offer storage services, aligning their incentives with network security and reliability. Users pay WAL for storage, creating organic demand directly tied to real usage. Every transaction reflects actual value exchange, not speculative trading.
This matters because most tokens lack fundamental utility beyond trading. WAL serves as the essential currency within a functioning network that people are actively using for data storage needs.
Quiet builders often get overlooked in bull markets dominated by hype cycles. But infrastructure projects prove their worth when the noise fades, and only working technology remains. Walrus isn't competing for attention; it's competing on merit, solving real problems for real users.
@WalrusProtocol $WAL #walrus
{spot}(WALUSDT)
$DASH is because it already made a big breakout to 68.20, then pulled back and started holding around 61. That tells me the market is trying to turn the old spike into a new base, and I’m interested when support is being defended after a pump.
Market read
On the 15 minute view, DASH trended up from the mid 40s, accelerated, and tagged 68.20. After that peak, it corrected into the 58 to 60 area, then bounced back toward 61.25. Now price is stabilizing near 61 with smaller candles, which means selling pressure cooled down and buyers are still active. If 60 to 61 holds, continuation toward the previous high is possible. If it breaks under 58.8, the move can unwind deeper.
Entry point
I’m not chasing 68. I want the pullback hold near support.
Entry zone 60.20 to 61.60
Stop loss
58.40 (below the 58.89 support shelf, if price goes under that, the base failed)
Target point
TP1 64.10
TP2 66.80
TP3 68.20
How it’s possible
Because after a strong impulse, price often retraces, then forms a higher low before the next leg. This chart is doing exactly that, it’s trying to build a floor around 60 to 61. If buyers keep defending this area, price can rotate back to 64.10 first, then push into 66.80, and if momentum returns fully, a retest of 68.20 becomes the final target.
Let’s go and Trade now $DASH
$SOL is because it’s respecting a tight range, swept up to 143.84, then dipped back into the 141 zone and is trying to hold. I’m watching this because a range like this often breaks hard once liquidity is collected on both sides.
Market read
On the 15 minute view, SOL pushed from around 139.43 into the 143.84 high, then got rejected and pulled back. Price is now around 141.79, sitting near the mid to lower part of the range. The candles show wicks on both sides, so it’s still choppy, but structure is not broken yet. If 141 holds, we can see another rotation up toward the highs. If it loses 141, the next move can drag it back into the 139 to 140 support zone.
Entry point
I’m not chasing highs. I want the dip into support and a clean hold.
Entry zone 141.10 to 141.90
Stop loss
139.80 (below the 140 psychological area, if price goes under that, the range is failing)
Target point
TP1 143.85
TP2 145.90
TP3 148.80
How it’s possible
Because the market already showed demand from 139.43 and built a range after hitting 143.84. When price keeps returning to the same support area and bouncing, buyers are usually defending it. If SOL holds 141.10 to 141.90, it can retest 143.85 first. A clean break above that opens the door to 145.90, and if momentum expands, 148.80 becomes reachable.
Let’s go and Trade now $SOL
$ETH is because it just swept liquidity, ripped into 3,165.94, then pulled back fast and is now sitting near 3,142. That kind of spike and reset often gives a clean pullback entry if the base holds.
Market read
On the 15 minute view, ETH pushed up from the 3,122 area, accelerated hard, and tagged 3,165.94. Right after the top, it dumped back down and is now hovering around 3,142 with a strong red candle showing profit taking. This is still a bullish impulse, but it needs support to hold or the move can retrace deeper. If ETH holds the 3,130 to 3,140 zone, I’m expecting a bounce and another attempt upward. If it breaks under that, the market can slide back to the lower range.
Entry point
I’m not chasing the wick. I want the pullback into support and a hold.
Entry zone 3,132 to 3,145
Stop loss
3,118 (below the 3,122 swing low zone, if price breaks there, the setup is invalid)
Target point
TP1 3,166
TP2 3,220
TP3 3,280
How it’s possible
Because the market already showed strong demand by pushing from 3,122 to 3,166 in a short time. After a spike, price often retests the breakout base to confirm buyers are still there. If ETH holds 3,132 to 3,145, it can retest 3,166 first. A clean break above that opens room for 3,220, and if momentum expands again, 3,280 becomes the extension.
Let’s go and Trade now $ETH
$BTC is because it just swept a clear low near 91,787, then ripped straight into 92,915 and is now pulling back in a controlled way. I’m watching this because that kind of reclaim often gives a clean continuation setup if support holds.
Market read
On the 15 minute view, BTC dipped into 91,787.61, then buyers stepped in hard and pushed price to 92,915.12. After tagging that high, it’s cooling off and sitting around 92,371 with a red pullback candle. This looks like profit taking after an impulse, not a full breakdown yet. If BTC holds the reclaim zone, we can see another push toward the highs. If it loses the reclaim zone, it can slide back into the lower range.
Entry point
I’m not chasing the top. I want the pullback into support and a hold.
Entry zone 92,050 to 92,350
Stop loss
91,700 (below the 91,787 swing low area, if price breaks there, the setup is invalid)
Target point
TP1 92,915
TP2 93,450
TP3 94,200
How it’s possible
Because the market already showed where demand is, it defended 91,787 and flipped momentum fast. After a move like that, price often retests the breakout zone to confirm buyers are still there. If BTC keeps holding 92,050 to 92,350, it can retest 92,915 first. A clean break above that opens room toward 93,450, and if momentum expands, 94,200 becomes the next extension.
Let’s go and Trade now $BTC
$BNB is because it’s holding a strong range, defended the 900 area, and keeps bouncing after each dip. I’m watching this because it looks like a controlled accumulation zone, and the trade is clean if support keeps holding.
Market read
On the 15 minute view, BNB hit a local high near 914.98, then pulled back and swept down into 906.18. Buyers stepped in fast from that low and pushed price back into the 910 zone. Now it’s moving sideways with sharp wicks, which tells me liquidity is getting collected on both sides. If BNB holds above 906 to 900, I’m expecting another attempt toward the 915 area. If it loses 900, the range breaks and a deeper drop can follow.
Entry point
I’m looking to buy the dip into support, not chase the spikes.
Entry zone 906 to 910
Stop loss
898 (below the 900 support, if price goes under that, the range is invalid)
Target point
TP1 915
TP2 928
TP3 945
How it’s possible
Because this chart is showing repeated liquidity sweeps followed by quick recoveries, that’s usually smart buying in a range. If buyers keep defending 906 to 900, price can push back to 915 first. A clean break above 915 opens room to 928, and if momentum expands, 945 becomes reachable as the next extension zone.
Let’s go and Trade now $BNB
FED CHAIR JEROME POWELL IS IN HUGE TROUBLE 🚨
He's TRAPPED, here's why....
Just now, US CPI came in line with expectations at 2.7%, while Core CPI came in lower than expected at 2.6%.
This is the exact number that came during the last CPI print, which means CPI is not running hot.
And this could be a problem for Powell.
Powell has been holding rates because the Fed thinks inflation will go up.
But instead of that, CPI and Core CPI are moving towards the Fed's target.
Also, Truflation, which calculates CPI in real time, is showing that US inflation is now below 1.8%
This means the Fed is late in cutting rates, and this is a bad thing.
The economy is already in distress due to high rates, and the Fed is still pausing rate cuts despite low CPI print.
As we all know, the Fed did a 50BPS rate cut right before the 2024 election, even though the markets were expecting 25BPS.
Back then, Core CPI was at 3.3%, while the unemployment rate was at 4.1%.
Today, Core CPI is at 2.6%, and the unemployment rate has surged to 4.4%, but still the Fed is being hawkish.
And I think Trump administration knew about this CPI data and that's why they are going after Powell.
Powell can say anything he wants, but the reality is that the Fed is way behind its curve.
The market needs more rate cuts, and the Fed will have to deliver it in 2026.