The perpetual trading market just hit a major inflection point this year—volumes have literally exploded, tripling compared to 2024. What's fascinating is the shift happening right now: Hyperliquid's once-dominant grip is loosening as the field becomes genuinely competitive. Lighter, Aster, and Hyperliquid are now battling it out for market share, with each platform carving out its own player base. This fragmentation isn't random—it reflects traders chasing better liquidity, lower fees, and unique features. The perpetual derivatives space is finally becoming the multi-player arena everyone predicted.
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LightningPacketLoss
· 01-12 02:19
Damn, triple growth? Hyperliquid is really about to be divided up this time. I've always said that monopolies are a dead end.
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Lighter and Aster suddenly rise, it feels like the entire perpetual market is about to be reshuffled.
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Talking about fragmentation, isn't it just about rolling up transaction fees? I’ll definitely go for the cheapest one.
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Finally, Hyperliquid is no longer the only dominant player. Now it’s getting interesting.
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Wait, triple? Are you sure there’s no mistake? It just seemed to have become popular last year.
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Healthy competition is good, but I’m worried liquidity might get dispersed, and then slippage will increase.
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What is Aster? First time hearing about it. Has anyone used it? Is it reliable?
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ConsensusBot
· 01-11 18:37
Hyperliquid is really about to get rolled over this time. The threefold increase sounds great, but the fragmentation is quite annoying... but the user experience definitely wins.
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GweiWatcher
· 01-10 12:31
Triple growth? Damn, this is the real explosion. Those previous numbers were just weak.
Hyperliquid has been held down, finally someone dares to move it. Honestly, it was about time.
The liquidity war has started, brothers. Fees are going all out.
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TeaTimeTrader
· 01-10 11:33
It seems that the days of Hyperliquid's dominance are truly coming to an end, and it was about time. Lighter and Aster have emerged, and the competition has finally managed to bring down the fees.
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ConfusedWhale
· 01-09 10:00
Triple growth? Damn, this wave is really coming
Being targeted by Hyperliquid was only a matter of time, nothing surprising
Transaction fees are ingrained in the bones, traders are the real parents
Lighter and Aster are riding the hype, how long they can last remains to be seen
Perpetual contracts are really about to heat up, anyway I'm just watching the fun
It's just that it's getting harder and harder to scalp the wool
Whoever leads doesn't matter, as long as there's liquidity, making money is the most important
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GasWaster
· 01-09 09:59
ngl hyperliquid's fall from grace hits different when you're paying bridge fees to jump platforms lmao... finally some competition tho, maybe these new players will actually optimize their gas instead of just printing money
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MEVSupportGroup
· 01-09 09:54
Triple growth? Sounds good, but I care more about how long Hyperliquid can actually last...
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The word "fragmentation" sounds so comfortable; it actually means no one trusts a single platform anymore.
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Lighter and Aster suddenly skyrocketing is a bit outrageous. Who's pushing behind the scenes?
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Low fees? Please, everyone, check the slippage carefully before speaking.
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This round of competition may not be good news for retail investors; liquidity is dispersed and easier to be "cut."
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Finally, someone dares to challenge Hyperliquid's position. About time.
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A threefold increase sounds exaggerated, but seasoned traders have already moved on to other places.
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Multiple-party competition? I think it's just everyone competing internally over fees.
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FreeMinter
· 01-09 09:40
A threefold increase is quite wild, but it's also expected that Hyperliquid will be divided and eaten up.
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Wait, can Lighter and Aster really fight? It still depends on fees and slippage.
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Fragmentation is good; monopolies should be broken, and competition can produce real innovation.
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If this battle continues, traders will be the real winners.
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The fee war has started; I'll go wherever the fees are lower.
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Another story of "finally," the perpetual market should have been like this long ago.
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Will liquidity dispersion be bad? Worried that some trading pairs lack depth.
The perpetual trading market just hit a major inflection point this year—volumes have literally exploded, tripling compared to 2024. What's fascinating is the shift happening right now: Hyperliquid's once-dominant grip is loosening as the field becomes genuinely competitive. Lighter, Aster, and Hyperliquid are now battling it out for market share, with each platform carving out its own player base. This fragmentation isn't random—it reflects traders chasing better liquidity, lower fees, and unique features. The perpetual derivatives space is finally becoming the multi-player arena everyone predicted.