Understanding Korea: Why We Are Focusing on the K-Crypto
Since last year, Mitosis had the opportunity to meet builders and operators in the Korean crypto ecosystem—first through Liquidity Summit at KBW 2024(
x.com/MitosisOrg/status/1829…), and recently during Mitosis & Friends: Seoul
These weren’t just events—they were windows into a market that doesn’t behave like any other.
What we encountered wasn’t simply a region with demand, but an ecosystem with its own language, trust structures, and information flows.
This article outlines how Mitosis views the Korean market and how we’re approaching it with intention and respect.
The Korean Crypto Ecosystem Works Differently
In most English-speaking Web3 spaces, X serves as the central information hub. Projects share updates, influencers spread them, and users react in real time.
Korea operates on a different rhythm.
In the Korean ecosystem, information flows through a layered structure, one shaped by translation, curation, and trust intermediaries.
X – Original announcements are made here, but few users consume them directly.
Telegram – Key influencers and channel operators act as curators and translators, summarizing global content.
KakaoTalk, YouTube, local forums – Most users rely on these platforms for actual content consumption.
In this flow, the interpretation of a project—its values, relevance, and intentions—can shift significantly depending on who translates it, how it's framed, and where it's published.
Moreover:
- Users who follow both X and Telegram tend to be familiar with Web3 concepts and active across both CEX and on-chain environments.
- Those who rely on KakaoTalk and YouTube often prefer centralized exchanges and are less exposed to DeFi mechanics.
This isn’t just a logistical difference.
It's a distinct mode of network formation—and one that deserves its own approach.
What Mitosis Sees in Korea
At Mitosis, we view our users and partners as our most important infrastructure.
We’re not drawn to markets simply because they appear “large” or “active”—we’re looking for alignment.
In Korea, we found a structure that aligns with our values.
- Translators, curators, and content creators aren’t on the sidelines—they’re the core infrastructure.
- The way users judge a project often focuses more on credibility and architectural integrity than short-term trends.
- And while the current on-chain footprint may be limited, we see a clear opportunity: a large, committed user base that simply hasn’t been meaningfully onboarded into Web3 yet.
How Mitosis Is Approaching the Korean Market
We're not running a marketing campaign.
We're building long-term connections—through the people and structures that already power Korean crypto.
1. Partnering with Local Networks
We’re actively working with DeSpread, one of Korea’s most trusted Web 3.0 growth studio, to explore ways to meaningfully integrate into Korea’s communication patterns and trust systems
DeSpread(
@DeSpreadTeam) is a data‑driven Web3 growth studio founded in 2019 and based in Seoul, South Korea. It empowers global teams to enter and expand within the Asian market through services such as go‑to‑market consulting, market research, ecosystem validation, and community tools development.
We’re also partnering with Xangle(
@Xangle_official ), a Korean research and go to market company, and expanding into various channels so Koreans can easily discover Mitosis from different angles.
2. Collaborating with Ecosystem Builders
We’re also engaging with Korean Web3 projects like Spindle, who participated in Mitosis & Friends: Seoul as speakers.
By collaborating directly with builders on the ground, we gain not only technical synergy—but cultural and strategic alignment with how local users think and behave.
Community First. Always.
Mitosis is committed to building structures that communities can grow within—not extract value from. That commitment isn’t limited to Korea.
Across every market we enter, we recognize that each language and region has its own way of organizing, communicating, and growing trust.
There is no one-size-fits-all approach. We believe in building with the community, not for it.
That’s why we’ll continue to adapt our messaging, onboarding structures, and ecosystem relationships to respect and reflect local dynamics.
In Korea, that means acknowledging how information flows. Elsewhere, it may mean something entirely different.
Mitosis connects globally — our approach respects the local.