Cross-chain bridges are a technological tool that connects different and isolated blockchain systems, allowing users to transfer assets and information across multiple chains. This is similar to bridges in life, helping users safely transfer assets from one chain to another, such as moving from Ethereum to BNB Chain.
The current blockchain ecosystem presents a state of coexistence of multiple chains, where chains cannot communicate directly, resulting in asset isolation and difficulty in collaboration. Cross-chain bridges solve the trouble of users frequently switching platforms and enable projects to expand their ecological coverage.
Cross-chain bridges are usually divided into:
Cross-chain bridges often use locking and minting mechanisms. After assets are locked in the smart contract on the source chain, the corresponding tokens are minted on the target chain, forming a value-equivalent cross-chain transfer. This enhances liquidity but may also bring security challenges associated with wrapped tokens.
cross-chain bridges are widely used in:
Cross-chain bridges have high security risks and often become targets for hacker attacks, such as the 2022 Ronin Bridge incident. Risks include vulnerabilities in smart contracts, centralized verification mechanisms, malicious signing parties, and asset custody security issues.
Cross-chain technology is evolving towards more modularity (LayerZero end nodes and relayers), native interoperability standards (Cosmos IBC, Polkadot XCM), and zero-knowledge proof validation, enhancing security and flexibility, and promoting multi-chain ecosystem integration.