
Beyond the Hype: At Its Ten-Year Mark, Taiwan’s “deX” Summit Charts a New Course for Web3
The chaotic, speculative gold rush of early cryptocurrency is fading into memory.
In its place, a more deliberate, foundational structure is rising.
Nowhere is this transition more apparent than in Taiwan, where the upcoming tenth anniversary of the Blockchain Lovers’ Summit marks a profound coming-of-age.
Themed “deX,” the event cleverly signifies both a decade of progress and the decentralized spirit that started it all.
This is not merely a conference; it is a declaration that after ten years of experimentation, Taiwan’s Web3 ecosystem is ready to move beyond the fringe and into the core of digital finance and governance.
For years, the Web3 world has been defined by a tense standoff between radical innovation and institutional regulation.
The “deX” summit, however, frames this not as a conflict but as a necessary dance.
Sessions dedicated to the new frontiers of digital assets and the critical fight against money laundering highlight a maturing ecosystem grappling with its own success.
As global frameworks like the EU’s MiCA and the US’s GENIUS Act take shape, Taiwan finds itself at a crucial crossroads.
The conversation is no longer about resisting oversight but about architecting it intelligently, creating a sandboxed environment where novel financial models like “Hold, Earn, Trade” can flourish without sacrificing security or stability.
The true test of any technology lies in its ability to solve real-world problems.
The summit’s intense focus on Real World Assets (RWA) and stablecoins signals a decisive shift from abstract speculation to tangible utility.
This is where blockchain transcends crypto-trading and begins to reshape the economy.
By tokenizing physical assets, RWA promises to unlock liquidity and transparency for everything from real estate to corporate bonds.
The dialogue at “deX,” featuring pioneers from Japan’s SBI Group and Singapore’s DigiFT, isn’t about the next bull run; it’s about building the rails for cross-border payments, optimizing B2B settlements, and creating a more inclusive financial system, using Japan’s methodical stablecoin implementation as a key case study.
Underpinning all these financial innovations is a more fundamental challenge: establishing trust in a trustless environment.
The summit acknowledges this with a dedicated workshop on the building blocks of digital identity—Decentralized Identifiers (DIDs) and Verifiable Credentials (VCs).
This is the less glamorous but arguably more important work.
Before we can have a robust on-chain economy, we need a way for individuals and institutions to prove who they are without sacrificing privacy or relying on centralized gatekeepers.
This move towards a “verifiable,” not just “trusted,” web is the critical infrastructure project that will determine whether Web3 remains a niche for enthusiasts or becomes the backbone of our future digital interactions.
The journey from a small 2016 gathering of passionate technologists to a major 2025 summit supported by the Ministry of Digital Affairs and the Financial Supervisory Commission is a story of incredible growth.
The tenth anniversary, strategically aligned with FintechON and Taipei Blockchain Week, represents more than just a milestone; it signifies the convergence of disparate parts of the ecosystem.
It’s a powerful demonstration of maturity, bridging the worlds of compliance (FintechON), community-driven innovation (the Summit), and global developer culture (TBW).
This integrated approach signals that Taiwan is no longer just participating in the Web3 conversation but is actively seeking to lead it.


