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The cryptocurrency industry’s rising stars have once again made a strong impression, claiming nearly a third of the coveted spots in Forbes’ “30 Under 30” finance category for 2025.
Released on December 4, the annual list recognizes outstanding young business leaders across North America.
Among the 30 honorees, 14 founders represented nine crypto and blockchain-related companies, featuring 10 male and four female founders.
Polymarket Founder Among the Honorees
Among them is Shayne Coplan, the 26-year-old founder of Polymarket, a decentralized betting platform that garnered attention for its innovative markets and bold predictions during the United States presidential election.
Polymarket users predicted Donald Trump’s victory even as traditional polls showed a tight race against Kamala Harris.
Coplan’s achievements, however, came with challenges, including a reported FBI raid following the election, which Polymarket described as politically motivated retaliation.
Several decentralized exchange (DEX) innovators also made the cut. Kaledora Kiernan-Linna and Marco Antonio Ribeiro, co-founders of Ostium Labs, shared a spot with Sunny Aggarwal and Dev Ojha, the duo behind Osmosis.
Cindy Leow, co-founder of Drift Labs, further represented the DEX community on the list.
Other standout entries include the founding trio of Cortex Labs — Soroush Ghodsi Boushehri, Stefan Stokic, and Jake Sylvestre — who are pioneering artificial intelligence-capable blockchains.
Tux Pacific, the founder of Entropy, was also recognized for developing on-chain AI agents.
Additionally, Omni Network co-founders Austin King and Tyler Tarsi earned their place for their work on a multichain decentralized app protocol.
Jason Zhao of Story and Uma Roy of Succinct were also celebrated for their efforts in intellectual property tokenization and zero-knowledge proof programming, respectively.
This year’s showing mirrors that of 2024, when crypto founders also claimed nine spots on the list.
However, the industry’s influence has not yet returned to its peak in 2021, when Forbes highlighted 21 blockchain leaders, including prominent figures such as Sam Bankman-Fried and Caroline Ellison.
Both were later embroiled in scandals surrounding Alameda Research and FTX, culminating in Ellison’s imprisonment and Bankman-Fried’s 20-year sentence for fraud.
US Crypto Owners Expect More Regulation
Cryptocurrency enforcement in the United States may ease under the upcoming administration of Republican President-elect Donald Trump, with regulatory priorities expected to shift.
Speaking at a legal conference in New York, current and former senior government lawyers indicated that while financial fraud cases will still be pursued, the Justice Department’s focus will likely move toward immigration enforcement, a key campaign promise of Trump.
Scott Hartman, co-chief of the securities and commodities task force at the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Manhattan, revealed that fewer resources will be allocated to policing cryptocurrency crimes.
As of late, the SEC has been facing growing criticism due to its “regulation-by-enforcement” approach to the crypto industry.
Critics argue that the SEC has failed to establish a clear regulatory framework for cryptocurrencies, opting instead to pursue legal action against key industry players.