Axie Infinity Loses $620 Million After Hacker Compromised Ronin Validators

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According to Sky Mavis, the creators of the blockchain NFT game Axie Infinity, the Ronin network has been attacked, and a hacker has managed to siphon 173,600 in ethereum and 25.5 million usd coin (USDC). The attacker has obtained roughly $620 million worth of crypto assets, and the Ronin bridge and Katana Dex have been paused.

The Largest NFT Blockchain Game Axie Infinity Suffers From a $620 Million Hack

The largest non-fungible token (NFT) blockchain game, Axie Infinity, has suffered from an attack on Tuesday after the Ronin network validators were compromised. Sky Mavis, the company behind the Axie Infinity project, explained that the validators were compromised as early as March 23.

The funds were drained in two transactions (transaction 1 and transaction 2) and Sky Mavis discovered the attack after a user complained that they could not withdraw 5,000 ether from the Ronin bridge.

“The attacker used hacked private keys in order to forge fake withdrawals,” Sky Mavis’s post mortem statement discloses. While the Ronin bridge and Katana Dex has been halted, Sky Mavis also said: “We are working with law enforcement officials, forensic cryptographers, and our investors to make sure all funds are recovered or reimbursed. All of the AXS, RON, and SLP on Ronin are safe right now.”

The team further explained that the project uses nine validator nodes to run Ronin, and in order to deposit or withdraw, five out of nine are needed to process a transaction.

“The attacker managed to get control over Sky Mavis’s four Ronin Validators and a third-party validator run by Axie DAO,” Sky Mavis said. “The validator key scheme is set up to be decentralized so that it limits an attack vector, similar to this one, but the attacker found a backdoor through our gas-free RPC node, which they abused to get the signature for the Axie DAO validator.”

What’s worse is that Sky Mavis notes that the attacker got away with it because of a change made back in November 2021, and they discontinued the “Axie DAO allowlisted” scheme the very next month.

However, the “allowlist access was not revoked” the team said, and Sky Mavis added that “once the attacker got access to Sky Mavis systems they were able to get the signature from the Axie DAO validator by using the gas-free RPC.” Sky Mavis’s post mortem continued:

We have confirmed that the signature in the malicious withdrawals match up with the five suspected validators.

The attack against Ronin is one of the largest hacks against a crypto protocol this year, as it surpassed the attack against the Wormhole bridge. That specific attack against the Wormhole bridge saw the loss of $320 million, but the funds were replaced by Jump Crypto. Sky Mavis explained on Tuesday that the team is working with law enforcement in order to “ensure the criminals get brought to justice.”

Moreover, the team is in the process of discussing with stakeholders and talking about how to make sure users are compensated. “Sky Mavis is here for the long term and will continue to build,” the team’s post mortem concludes.

Tags in this story
$620 million, Attack, Axie DAO, axie infinity, Axie Infinity Exploit, axs, Exploit, Hack, Katana Dex, post mortem, Ronin attack, Ronin Bridge, Ronin chain, Ronin Validator Vulnerability, Ronin Validators, Sky Mavis, stakeholders, Vulnerability, Wormhole bridge

What do you think about Axie Infinity losing $620 million to someone who found a validator exploit? Let us know what you think about this subject in the comments section below.

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Jamie Redman

Jamie Redman is the News Lead at Bitcoin.com News and a financial tech journalist living in Florida. Redman has been an active member of the cryptocurrency community since 2011. He has a passion for Bitcoin, open-source code, and decentralized applications. Since September 2015, Redman has written more than 5,000 articles for Bitcoin.com News about the disruptive protocols emerging today.




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