MoonPay’s acquisition of Glide looks like another deal in the crypto infrastructure space. It may actually point to a much bigger shift in how the industry expects to reach mainstream users.
Using crypto meant learning how different blockchains worked. Users had to choose networks, manage wallets, compare fees and understand bridges before completing even simple transactions.
The next phase may require none of that.
The Best Infrastructure Is the One Users Never Notice
Glide’s technology automatically finds the best route for a transaction, regardless of the blockchain, token or wallet involved.
That changes the industry’s priorities.
Instead of asking users to understand increasingly complex infrastructure, companies are beginning to hide that complexity behind a familiar experience.
This is how many successful technologies have evolved. Consumers rarely think about the protocols that power email, video calls or online payments. Those systems became widely adopted once the technology faded into the background.
Blockchain may be following the same path.
If users no longer need to know which network processes a transaction, competition could shift away from attracting end users and toward building the infrastructure that quietly powers their experience.
The next stage of crypto adoption may not come from creating more blockchains. It may come from making them invisible.
