Crypto Heist on Solana-Aurory Gaming Ecosystem: $600,000 Stolen, AURY Token Value Plummets
Crypto News – In a significant security breach, the Solana-Aurory gaming ecosystem has fallen victim to fraudsters who successfully penetrated its defenses. This breach resulted in a devastating loss of 80% of the AURY-USDC liquidity pool on the decentralized cryptocurrency exchange, Carmelot. The perpetrators targeted the SyncSpace Aurory bridge on Camelot’s native decentralized exchange (DEX) Arbitrum, drastically diminishing the pool’s value from an estimated $1.5 million to just $312,000.
The development team of the project has acknowledged this security compromise. Aurory reports that the scammers accessed assets totaling around $600,000. Despite this unsettling event, the developers assure that user assets remain secure. As a precaution and to facilitate a thorough investigation, all deposit and withdrawal activities on the platform have been temporarily suspended.
This incident has not only raised concerns within the project but has also sparked discussions across the crypto community’s microblogs.
The aftermath of this incident saw the native token of the AURY ecosystem, AURY, experience a significant value drop of 17%, plummeting to $1.17 in the last 24 hours. It even briefly dipped to $1.13 before regaining some of its lost value. Interestingly, despite this setback, the token has exhibited an upward trend over the past month, marking an 86% increase from its previous price of $0.60.
SyncSpace plays a pivotal role in the Aurory ecosystem, acting as a bridge that facilitates the seamless transition of items between on-chain and off-chain states in a single transaction. This feature allows players to transfer their in-game assets, which are initially off-chain, onto the blockchain whenever they choose to ‘desynchronize’ them.
A report from TRM Labs highlights a concerning trend in the digital asset space. Between January and mid-December 2023, hackers have absconded with approximately $1.7 billion in cryptocurrency assets from various organizations and individual users. This figure represents about half of the total cryptocurrency theft recorded in 2022, where losses amounted to nearly $4 billion.
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