Venture capital in crypto has rarely been quiet, but the first half of 2026 is shaping up as a period of concentrated aggression from the industry’s biggest names—and a few unexpected ones. According to data compiled by CryptoRank and highlighted in the original report , Coinbase Ventures led all investors by a wide margin, participating in 30 deals through the first six months of the year. It wasn’t just a numbers game. The distribution of deals tells a story about which balance sheets are most willing to keep writing checks while regulatory fights drag on and token prices search for direction.
Animoca Brands posted 19 deals, a16z crypto recorded 18, and Tether landed at 15. After that, a cluster of firms—Castrum Capital, Becker Ventures, and Galaxy—each recorded 10 deals. The list itself doesn’t include deal sizes or sector breakdowns, but the sheer count places Coinbase Ventures in a position it hasn’t occupied so visibly since the last true venture boom. Animoca’s second-place finish is consistent with its expansionist approach to web3 gaming and metaverse infrastructure, while a16z’s 18 deals suggest the firm’s multi-billion-dollar crypto fund remains in deployment mode despite a market that has punished late-stage valuations.
Tether’s quiet venture buildout
Tether’s presence in the top four is the variable that changes the narrative. The company that prints the world’s largest dollar-pegged stablecoin has been steadily investing its profits into adjacent infrastructure, energy projects, and now apparently early-stage startups. Fifteen deals in six months is not a passive treasury management exercise. It signals that Tether is building a venture portfolio that could eventually rival dedicated crypto funds in pace and influence. Combined with its push into payment rails and commodity trade finance, Tether is assembling a vertically integrated stack that other stablecoin issuers have not attempted at this scale.
These rankings don’t reveal whether Tether’s activity is concentrated in pre-seed rounds, strategic token deals, or more traditional equity. But the volume alone forces a re-evaluation of the stablecoin issuer’s ambitions. In the same period that Tether was writing 15 checks, Circle Ventures was far less visible. That asymmetry may matter for protocols looking for capital from entities that also control liquidity rails.
What dealers are really buying
Transaction counts can obscure as much as they reveal. A high deal count with small check sizes looks different than a concentrated bet on a handful of large rounds. Coinbase Ventures, for its part, has a history of writing relatively small checks into a high volume of early-stage deals, using its exchange ecosystem as a distribution funnel. The strategy makes sense when capital is abundant and founders are fighting for exchange listings, but its durability depends on whether those early bets mature into liquid tokens that can actually be distributed.
The broader institutional appetite for crypto infrastructure has already produced blockbuster deals, such as the $4.2 billion acquisition of Equiniti by Bullish, covered in a recent tokenization roundup . A separate indicator of infrastructure demand comes from Sui, where institutional staking products helped push the token price up 18% in a single day in May, as reported earlier . When VCs sink capital into layer-1 ecosystems and staking infrastructure, they are implicitly betting that these networks will capture the same kind of institutional flow that is now beginning to arrive.
At the same time, deal volume alone doesn’t answer the harder question: how many of these bets are marking-to-market? With limited token liquidity and a secondary market that remains skittish about private valuations, the gap between portfolio mark-ups and realized returns is widening. That tension will become harder to ignore if the deal count stays elevated but exit opportunities don’t materialize.
Regulatory noise, venture continuity
The regulatory picture is similarly unsettled. A landmark US crypto bill faces an 11th-hour assault by banking lobbyists just days before a Senate vote, as detailed in this coverage . For venture firms, that kind of brinkmanship makes every deal a bet on political outcomes, not just product-market fit. It is notable, then, that the pace of early-stage crypto investing hasn’t slowed. Either the investors believe the bill will pass in some form, or they’ve already priced in the worst-case regulatory environment.
While VC deal counts reveal where money is flowing, blockchain developer activity provides a measure of organic ecosystem health. In the latest weekly tally, Ethereum, BNB Chain, and Polygon topped the rankings, demonstrating that the ecosystems with the deepest builder communities remain the most resilient, as highlighted in a developer activity analysis . The correlation between high developer counts and sustained VC interest is not perfect, but it is often a leading indicator of where protocols can attract enough engineering talent to ship meaningful upgrades.
For now, the data shows a market where conviction capital is still being deployed, but in a more concentrated and strategic fashion than during the froth of 2021. The firms at the top of the list are not merely throwing darts; they are using their existing platform advantages to create deal flow that smaller funds cannot replicate. Whether that approach generates superior returns over the 2026–2028 cycle is the real metric to watch.