Cosmos Labs, the core development subsidiary of the Interchain Foundation, announced on June 4, 2026, that it has acquired the block explorer Mintscan and established a new subsidiary, Cosmos Labs Korea Co., Ltd. (CLK), to bolster its presence in the Asia-Pacific region.
This acquisition consolidates Mintscan alongside Skip:Go, IBC Eureka, and the Cosmos Hub under a single operational umbrella. By integrating Mintscan’s indexing and API capabilities with Skip:Go’s routing infrastructure, the team aims to create a more streamlined platform for developers and institutions within an ecosystem that currently powers over 150 blockchains.
The transaction follows discussions that began in October 2025, initiated by the co-founders of Stamper, the South Korean firm and legal entity behind Cosmostation that previously owned Mintscan. While a select number of Mintscan employees will transition to Cosmos Labs, the remaining business units of Stamper are unaffected and will continue to operate normally.
This effort aligns with changing altcoin market trends where established ecosystems focus on strengthening core infrastructure to support long-term adoption.
Headquartered in Seoul, CLK serves as a strategic anchor in what has historically been the most decisive market for the ATOM token. Seoul was selected due to its status as a hub for financial innovation and its early, strong adoption of Cosmos technology.
Cosmos Labs Co-CEO Barry Plunkett noted that the joining team has been building in the ecosystem for eight years. He expressed excitement about the opportunity to “accelerate Cosmos’ roadmap together” through this integration of talent and tools.
Integrating Mintscan for improved ecosystem accessibility
The acquisition focuses on bringing Mintscan’s extensive tracking capabilities—which currently cover more than 80 Cosmos-based blockchains—directly into the Cosmos Labs suite. This move is designed to reinforce the central role of the Cosmos Hub and ATOM in providing essential blockchain services. By streamlining developer tools, the organization hopes to foster an environment where enterprises can more confidently build on the vision of interoperability.
Robert Renier, Ecosystem Lead at Cosmos Labs, described the interoperable product vision as ambitious, spanning dozens of chains via the Inter-Blockchain Communication protocol (IBC). He stated that having a “dedicated, accountable team behind it is a genuine accelerant” for the work already underway. Much like how com/ethereum-recovery-outlook-wedge-breakdown-analysis-2026/”>Ethereum recovery outlooks often depend on network reliability and technical upgrades, this consolidation is intended to strengthen the foundational health of the Cosmos ecosystem.
Expanding engineering capacity for the Cosmos Hub
A primary goal of forming CLK is to expand the engineering capacity required to execute multiple priorities for the Cosmos Hub in parallel. Yongjoo Jung, Head of Engineering at CLK, emphasized that the acquisition allows the organization to build an engineering structure that can deliver on evolving needs quickly and effectively.
The team joining CLK includes principals who have been contributing to the Cosmos ecosystem for almost a decade.
This increased capacity is vital as the ecosystem matures and market conditions change rapidly. The Cosmos SDK and IBC protocol serve as foundational tooling for major projects such as Celestia, dYdX, and Injective. By strengthening the talent pool in South Korea, Cosmos Labs aims to advance its enterprise and public ecosystem infrastructure mandates simultaneously.
This ensures that the technical needs of the hub are met without delaying broader ecosystem support.
South Korea as a long-term institutional anchor
The establishment of CLK provides Cosmos with a permanent institutional presence in a region central to its history. Una Yu, CEO of CLK, remarked that there is a “practical and poetic logic” to choosing Seoul as the home for this effort.
She explained that the deal gives the ecosystem a long-term anchor to build on its legacy while providing a stable environment for developers. Just as speculative activity in XRP often highlights the importance of market trust, this move seeks to provide certainty for institutional participants.
Cosmos Labs, which also maintains offices in New York City and Berlin, will use the Seoul branch to engage more closely with the Asia-Pacific developer community. The integration of Mintscan’s product suite is expected to offer better transparency for stakeholders. By managing both the indexing layer and routing infrastructure, the organization positions itself to better support the sovereign, interoperable proof-of-stake chains it pioneered.
