If a user has to understand networks, confirmations, and product logic before doing basic things, then crypto still has not become part of normal banking
Almost every crypto product makes the same mistake. It greets the user not with money, but with infrastructure. Not with a balance and a clear action, but with the feeling that some study is required first. Learn the networks. Understand the confirmations. Get used to addresses. Decode the product’s internal mechanics. Only then, if none of that has already pushed the user away, are they finally allowed to do something simple.
That is exactly where crypto UX starts to break.
As long as a product presents crypto as a separate mode, it remains something for investing, one-off purchases, and special scenarios. Not money for everyday life, but a separate technical zone the user has to “enter” before they can even start using their funds.
For us at DARCA, the logic has to work the other way round. If crypto is really meant to become part of everyday banking, it cannot begin as a separate technical layer. Right after registration, the user should see crypto balances just as naturally as fiat balances. Not as something extra. Not as a separate tab “for people who already understand the market”. But as a normal part of their money flow.
That is why the basic principle here is simple: crypto should support the same familiar actions as fiat - send, pay, exchange, use a card. Not after separate training. Not after “adapting to crypto”. Not after the user has learned the internal topology of the product. Immediately.
That does not mean the infrastructure complexity disappears. It does not. But a strong product does not push that complexity onto the user where it is unnecessary. It removes it from the basic flow and leaves the user with only what actually matters: a clear balance, a clear action, and a clear result. Hiding the mechanics is fine. Hiding the outcome is not. A user should not have to think in terms of networks and confirmations just to complete a simple operation. But they should clearly understand what will happen, where the money will go, and what the result will be.
In my view, that is the real line between a product that merely “gives access to crypto” and a product that actually turns crypto into part of normal banking. If, after registration, the user still feels that they have entered another world, then the job is not done. But if crypto behaves like familiar money from the first screen, only without the old market friction, then it finally stops being a separate object and starts functioning as a normal part of everyday life.
Crypto becomes money not when it can be bought.
It becomes money when it can be used immediately and naturally.
1700+ people have already received access to DARCA testing, and we are continuing to open access further.
If you also want to join testing, here is the link:
https://forms.gle/toKvRjDVEheJEddV7
What do you think breaks crypto UX more - the infrastructure complexity itself, or the fact that almost every product shows that complexity to the user far too early?
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