Bybit is pulling the plug on its NFT and IDO services, announcing a complete shutdown scheduled for April 8, 2025. The crypto exchange’s decision affects its NFT Marketplace, Inscription Marketplace, and IDO platforms, with users advised to transfer assets to external wallets before the mid-April cutoff.
For those scrambling to relocate their digital collectibles, alternatives include OpenSea and Magic Eden for Ethereum-based NFTs, while Unisat and Mintle offer homes for inscription-based assets.
Behind this strategic retreat lurks a more alarming catalyst: a devastating $1.46 billion security breach in February 2025. North Korean hackers reportedly compromised Bybit‘s multisignature platform via AWS session tokens, using old-fashioned social engineering—think digital con artists rather than computer geniuses. This breach was conducted by Lazarus Group, a notorious North Korean hacking unit that has increasingly targeted crypto companies to fund state operations.
The staggering $1.46 billion heist wasn’t the work of coding wizards, just cunning social engineers who turned AWS tokens into skeleton keys.
The stolen funds vanished into mixing services faster than ice cream on a summer sidewalk, highlighting critical vulnerabilities in Bybit’s Web3 infrastructure.
The timing couldn’t be worse for Bybit’s NFT venture. The once-booming market has cooled dramatically, with trading volumes plummeting 70% from 2024 levels. Daily trading now hovers around $5.34 million—a pittance compared to December 2024’s peak of $113.6 million. The decline reflects a broader market saturation trend that pressured Bybit’s marketplace against established competitors.
It’s like opening an ice store in Antarctica just as global warming reverses.
CEO Ben Zhou is positioning this retreat as a strategic refocus on Bybit’s bread-and-butter: spot and derivatives trading. Rather than spreading resources thin like margarine on too much toast, the company aims to fortify its core operations while implementing improved security measures.
Regulatory pressures have also squeezed NFT platforms industry-wide. The SEC’s increasing scrutiny has turned the compliance landscape into a minefield, driving platforms like Kraken to similarly abandon their NFT operations. This regulatory scrutiny is part of a global trend where regional differences in crypto regulations create significant challenges for exchanges operating across multiple jurisdictions.
For users, the message is clear: the April 8 deadline approaches faster than you might think. While Bybit’s bold exit represents another casualty in the cooling NFT landscape, it signals a larger realignment as exchanges prioritize security and regulatory compliance in a post-hack crypto world.