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Magic Eden Exits EVM, Pushes Authorization Risk Into the Spotlight as Funds Accelerate Toward Solana
After Magic Eden’s Exit, Old Authorizations Become a Real Issue
Revoke.cash posted a widely circulated tweet turning Magic Eden’s shutdown of its EVM operations from a “normal business adjustment” into a security alert. On the surface, it was about cutting operations to improve efficiency, but the real concern is: those indefinite authorizations left on paused platforms keep user wallets vulnerable to attacks. The discussion shifted from “how will platform landscape change” back to “are wallets clean.”
Blockspace and CoinMarketCap analyzed this in the context of the overall NFT contraction: multi-chain ambitions have shrunk under revenue pressure. But notably, there hasn’t been a concentrated on-chain revocation effort. Worries are spreading, but few are actually taking action.
Initial reactions on Twitter interpreted the shutdown as EVM NFTs being “disproved.” That’s an exaggeration. The real risk comes from user inertia, not the platform’s shutdown—those authorizations are still there, regardless of Magic Eden’s existence. The news spread through over 15 major accounts in the security community, prompting some users to migrate to OpenSea and driving traffic to tools like Revoke.cash. But looking at data from Ethereum, Polygon, BSC, and Base since March 9, there hasn’t been a noticeable spike in revocations. People are talking about security, but few are actually acting.
Multi-Chain Structural Risks Actually Become a Selling Point for Solana
Jack Lu’s 80/20 principle explains the focus on core business, but misses one point: EVM’s authorization mechanism exposes retail investors to asymmetric downside risk; teams focusing on a single chain generally avoid this tail risk.
As the idea of “smart contract hacks” spreads, awareness of revoking authorizations is rising—Revoke.cash even added a dedicated tag. The API shutdown on March 27 might trigger more on-chain revocations, but looking back at Ethereum’s block data from March 1 to 13 (with 127 to 295 related transactions per day), there’s no sign of panic selling.
This table shows how different groups interpret the same event—and their blind spots.
Conclusion: Revoke.cash’s spread indeed exposed the trust vulnerability of EVM. But traders have missed the best timing. A better move is to focus on Solana’s entertainment sector (like Dicey)—during NFT contraction, builders and patient holders have higher cost-effectiveness. If funds ignore this, after the “revocation” hype subsides, relative returns may lag.
Judgment: Most traders entering now are already late; the real early movers are Solana entertainment ecosystem builders and long-term holders, with active funds also at an advantage. For those continuing to bet on multi-chain EVM NFTs, this cycle is either irrelevant or disadvantageous.