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OUR STORY / CRYPTO DESIGN

A design language {built} for Web3

Most design systems try to be for everyone. This one doesn't. It's electric lime on deep forest dark, monospace body copy, and type so big it fills the room. If your product lives near blockchain, DeFi, or Web3 — this is how serious projects look.

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FEED / CHAINFORGE-PX LATENCY 04MS
00Colors in the entire system
0Font weight for display type
00Box shadows. Not a single one.
00Accent color that does everything

● WHAT IT IS / THE FULL PICTURE

Bold enough
to make a statement

This is the design language that crypto actually uses — not the way a generic agency imagines it. It started with Bloomberg Terminal, picked up brutalist editorial along the way, and ended up somewhere that's genuinely its own thing. You know it when you see it.

Two fonts. Two colors. Zero decoration that doesn't earn its place. The headlines are so big they're basically architecture. The body copy is monospace, because this product speaks to people who write code — and they notice when you don't.

services / institutional.sol

> SERVICES & SOLUTIONS

Institutional
Grade Security

Self-custody wallet infrastructure built for funds, DAOs, and serious operators. Your keys, your crypto, your rules.

> [ READ MORE ]

● SUPPORTED ASSETS / 18 NETWORKS

Every major token,
one design language

● BEST FOR / USE CASES & PHILOSOPHY

Built for the people
who notice the details

If you're handling real money, you need to look like you take it seriously. This design language signals exactly that before you've built a single feature.

The people who use DeFi are technical. They spot generic design immediately. This aesthetic tells them you're one of them, before your product proves anything.

APIs, SDKs, infrastructure. When your customer writes code for a living, monospace body copy and bracket links aren't quirky — they're expected.

The curly braces, the bracket CTAs, the monospace body text — these signal "we're from the internet, we speak your language." It's a deliberate in-group marker that says technically credible before the product does anything to prove it.