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Circle wants to swallow Korean payments? Korea erupts in a "stablecoin defense battle"
The traditional narrative of “de-dollarization” is being reenacted in the on-chain world.
In the face of the ambitions of the world's second-largest stablecoin issuer Circle (USDC) to “land” in the South Korean market, major financial and technology giants in South Korea have rarely joined forces to launch a campaign aimed at defending financial sovereignty, the “Korean Won Stablecoin Defense Battle”.
The “Yin Scheme” of Dollar Stablecoins
In August this year, during his visit to South Korea, Circle President Heath Tarbert revealed to the four major financial institutions: “No intention to collaborate on a Korean won stablecoin; we will primarily promote the US dollar stablecoin.”
This is not arrogance, but a shrewd “monopoly strategy”:
This is exactly the nightmare for the Bank of Korea (BOK) — “Digital Dollarization” (referring to the replacement of the domestic currency with digital dollars such as stablecoins pegged to the US dollar). If Koreans begin to get used to saving and settling with USDC, South Korea's monetary policy will become ineffective, and an unobstructed USDC channel will become a “highway” for capital outflow.
This imminent sovereign threat has directly prompted the urgent assembly of South Korea's local “national team.”
Triangular Layout - “Guard and Counter”
In the face of the offensive from Silicon Valley giants, South Korea chose not to simply impose an administrative ban, but instead launched a combination strategy of “banking + gaming + Web3.”
[Bank] KakaoBank: Building a compliant “wall”
KakaoBank, South Korea's largest internet bank, has officially entered the market and is developing infrastructure for a Korean won stablecoin.
[Game] WEMADE & CertiK: Building the “Nuclear Weapon” for Application Scenarios
If banks are a shield, then the gaming giant WEMADE is a sword. By partnering with security giant CertiK to launch the GAKS Alliance and introduce the StableNet mainnet, WEMADE is doing something that Circle finds hard to achieve:
[Web3] Diversified Rangers: Flanking Maneuver
Meanwhile, projects like KRWQ and KRW1 are making diversified attempts on public chains such as Base and Avalanche. Although their scale is still small, they are acting like rangers, testing cross-chain technology and the composability of DeFi for the Korean won stablecoin, ensuring that Korea does not fall behind in technological boundaries.
The true “ambition” of the Korean won stablecoin
There are voices in the community questioning: “South Korea's electronic payments are already sufficiently developed, why do we need stablecoins to buy coffee?” This viewpoint seriously underestimates South Korea's strategic intentions.
The goal of the Korean won stablecoin has never been convenience stores, but rather the stars and the sea:
Output “Game Financial Hegemony”: Transform South Korea's strong gaming industry advantages into financial competitiveness. Global players must use the Korean won stablecoin for settlement when playing Korean games—this is an upgrade from cultural output to currency output.
Regional Trade “De-SWIFTing”: Bypassing the expensive and inefficient traditional SWIFT system to establish a low-cost clearing network in Asia centered around South Korea.
Incorporating Offshore Funds: Rather than allowing funds to circulate uncontrollably in offshore USD stablecoins, it is better to integrate them into a compliant on-chain system to achieve “capital freedom within a regulatory framework.”
The “Korean Model” of Asian Digital Finance
South Korea's “stablecoin defense battle” provides a valuable sample for all economies facing the impact of dollarization. It proves that in the Web3 era, the best way to maintain monetary sovereignty is not through “total ban” but rather through “institutional absorption”—utilizing local technology and financial giants to build an ecosystem that is more advantageous than external competitors.
This defensive line built by banks and gaming giants may be the prototype of the future digital financial landscape in Asia.