Public Chains Are Bad at Strategy, And That’s a Design Problem

Public blockchains excel at coordination and settlement. They are less effective at strategy execution. When every transaction is visible before it is finalized, markets reward speed and capital, not insight or conviction.

This is why MEV is not an anomaly, it is a structural outcome. Open mempools expose intent. Bots react faster than humans. Capital aggregates around actors who can see and move first.

Privacy-layer L1s approach this problem differently. Instead of exposing intent and hoping participants behave fairly, they design systems where execution does not leak strategy, yet final state remains verifiable.

Dusk Network, for example, treats privacy as a default execution property, not an optional add-on. Transactions can be validated, compliance can be proven, and state transitions can be audited, without broadcasting every intermediate detail.

This matters because markets are not games of perfect information. They are environments where controlled information flow is necessary for fairness. Public chains showed us what happens when that control is removed entirely.

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