In March 2025, a trader opened a $375M Bitcoin position on a fully transparent blockchain platform. Within hours, other traders were openly coordinating on social media to pool funds, hunt the position, and force a liquidation. That is not a bug in DeFi. On most chains, it is the design. Aster Chain launched its mainnet on March 17, 2026, with a direct answer to that problem. But to understand what it built, and why it chose to build an entirely new blockchain to do it, you need to know where it started.
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Aster began life as a decentralized exchange, or DEX. Think of a DEX as a crypto trading platform with no company in the middle; trades happen directly between users through code, with no central authority holding your funds. Aster’s early version operated across multiple blockchains and focused on derivatives trading, allowing users to take leveraged positions in crypto assets.
It was backed by YZi Labs, the investment arm formerly known as Binance Labs. That Binance-backed origin gave Aster credibility and resources, but the team eventually concluded that trading on someone else’s blockchain meant accepting someone else’s rules, including full public transparency of every trade.
The testnet for a new, purpose-built chain launched in late December 2025 and drew over 50,000 participants. The mainnet followed in March 2026. Aster had gone from a product built on top of other chains to owning its own foundation.
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Aster Chain is a Layer 1 blockchain, meaning it is a complete, independent network, not an add-on to Ethereum or any other existing chain. Think of Layer 1 blockchains like different countries, each with its own laws, currency, and infrastructure. Ethereum is one country. Solana is another. Aster Chain is now its own.
What makes it distinct is what it chose to build into that foundation: privacy as a default, not an option. Most blockchains work like a public bulletin board, every transaction, every position, every wallet balance is visible to anyone who looks. Aster’s execution layer encrypts transaction data by default, using a cryptographic approach that still allows the protocol itself to verify trades are legitimate.
The chain also targets sub-second finality, meaning transactions confirm in under a second, putting it in direct competition with high-performance platforms like Hyperliquid and dYdX. A native bridge connects it to BNB Chain, and proprietary oracles handle price feeds to keep trading data accurate.
Here is the tension at the heart of blockchain privacy: DeFi needs some transparency to function. Smart contracts need to verify that you actually have the funds you claim. Regulators increasingly want audit trails. Total anonymity violates both requirements.
Aster’s answer is what it calls programmable privacy and the key word is programmable. It is not a toggle between fully public and fully hidden. It is a framework that lets users and developers specify exactly what gets revealed, to whom, and when.
Aster uses three interlocking mechanisms. The first is zero-knowledge proofs, a cryptographic method that lets someone prove a statement is true without revealing the underlying data. Imagine proving you are over 18 without showing your birth date. ZK proofs let Aster verify that a trade is valid without exposing its details to the entire network.
The second is stealth addresses, one-time wallet addresses generated for each transaction so that your activity cannot be linked across trades by outside observers. Your funds move, but your pattern stays invisible.
The third is selective disclosure. If a regulator, auditor, or counterparty needs to verify a transaction, the user can generate a cryptographic proof that reveals only the relevant details. The protocol stays transparent where it needs to be; the trader stays private everywhere else.
The critical distinction Aster’s CEO Leonard draws is between two types of transparency: transparency between a user and the protocol (which Aster preserves) and transparency between a trader and their competitors (which Aster eliminates). The first is a feature. The second is a vulnerability.
“Aster Chain is the only architecture that treats privacy as a fundamental requirement for a fair market, neutralizing predatory attacks at the base layer.” — Leonard, CEO, Aster
This approach is part of a broader industry shift. Vitalik Buterin has similarly flagged privacy as a missing layer in Ethereum’s design, arguing that on-chain activity being fully public creates serious security and autonomy risks for users — a concern that extends well beyond trading.
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The $375 million position story is not an edge case. Position hunting — where traders identify a large leveraged position and coordinate to push the price toward its liquidation level — is a documented, recurring problem on fully transparent platforms. The attacker does not need to hack anything. They just need to read the blockchain.
The same transparency that makes DeFi auditable also enables front-running, where bots spot a pending transaction and insert their own trade ahead of it to profit from the price movement. It enables wallet tracking, where anyone can monitor a whale’s positions in real time and trade against them. On-chain privacy removes the information asymmetry that makes these attacks possible.
Aster is not the only project thinking about this problem, but it is one of the few that has chosen to solve it at the base layer rather than as an optional plugin. The difference matters: opt-in privacy creates a two-tier system where most users remain exposed. Default privacy changes the baseline for everyone on the network.
The mainnet launch generated immediate market interest; a large ASTER long position on Hyperliquid gained roughly $3.9 million in the hours following the launch, signaling at least short-term trader conviction. But enthusiasm at launch and sustainable adoption are different things.
The 53.5% airdrop allocation is generous to early users, which is good for distribution. It also creates real selling pressure risk if recipients cash out immediately, something the planned buyback mechanism will need to offset. A $56 million token unlock scheduled for launch day adds to that complexity.
The deeper question for Aster is whether default on-chain privacy becomes a genuine differentiator or a regulatory liability. Selective disclosure was specifically designed to thread that needle — giving auditors and regulators on-demand visibility while keeping trader activity private by default. Whether regulators accept that framing as compliance-friendly will matter significantly for institutional adoption.
Aster has built something technically coherent. The real test is whether DeFi users decide that privacy is worth switching chains for.
The post What is Aster Chain? A Beginner’s Guide to the Privacy-First Layer 1 appeared first on 99Bitcoins.
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