Another Day, Another Wallet Drain.
Hundreds of wallets were just emptied in one of the larger incidents we’ve seen this year. The funds are likely gone for good.
This isn’t a smart contract exploit. This isn’t a bridge hack. This is the same old story: private keys were compromised.
In 2026, the biggest threat to most users is still not the protocol they’re using. it’s how they store and protect their keys.
At Chevron8, we built Destiny with this reality in mind:
Strictly non-custodial - we never hold your keys.
Hardware-first design -
@Tangem is deeply integrated, not optional.
Hybrid Pull-on-Play - funds stay in your wallet until the exact moment they’re needed.
No single point of failure - even if your browser or phone is compromised, the damage is limited.
We can’t stop every attack in crypto. But we can build systems that make the most common attacks far less effective.
This is why we focus on real self-custody and hardware security instead of chasing hype.
Stay safe. Protect your keys like your life depends on it, because in crypto, it often does.
Unfortunately, a few hours ago, at least 297 wallets were drained across EVM chains. The funds were consolidated at the following address: 0x43D49AeF7aAf0Dcf015b20057C5364E092D66615 and were later distributed via
@FixedFloat. Nearly $500k was stolen. I suspect a massive private key leak associated with a wallet provider.