Virtuals joins growing exodus from LayerZero to Chainlink after KelpDAO exploit
The AI agent platform moved more than $700m in token infrastructure to Chainlink CCIP as the industry’s focus shifts toward interoperability security.
Virtuals Protocol said it is migrating more than $700m worth of VIRTUAL token infrastructure from LayerZero to Chainlink CCIP. It becomes one of several major protocols to leave LayerZero following the KelpDAO exploit fallout.
In a June 4 announcement, Virtuals said it conducted a full security review after the “LayerZero-related exploit” and ultimately selected Chainlink’s Cross-Chain Interoperability Protocol [CCIP] as its exclusive cross-chain infrastructure provider.
The migration adds another major protocol to a growing list of projects that have shifted toward Chainlink CCIP after the exploit reignited debate around cross-chain security standards across DeFi and tokenized infrastructure.
Virtuals cites security concerns after exploit
According to the announcement, Virtuals decided to migrate after reviewing multiple cross-chain infrastructure options following the exploit linked to KelpDAO’s rsETH bridge setup.
The company said its infrastructure for autonomous AI agents requires stronger cross-chain protections.
The announcement stated that “99% is not enough” for agent infrastructure security standards.
The company said the migration will help expand VIRTUAL’s distribution across DeFi while strengthening the protocol’s underlying payment and coordination infrastructure for AI agents.
More protocols are leaving LayerZero
Virtuals is not the first major protocol to move away from LayerZero following the exploit.
Over recent weeks, several projects have either migrated or announced plans to migrate cross-chain infrastructure toward Chainlink CCIP, including:
- KelpDAO,
- Solv Protocol,
- Lombard,
- and Kraken-linked wrapped Bitcoin infrastructure.
The migrations collectively represent billions of dollars in tokenized assets and cross-chain liquidity flows.
The trend has increasingly positioned Chainlink CCIP as a leading interoperability provider for projects emphasizing institutional-grade security architecture after the exploit.
Cross-chain competition shifts toward security
The migration wave also reflects a broader shift underway across the interoperability sector.
For years, cross-chain competition largely centered on:
- speed,
- composability,
- and multichain expansion.
Since the KelpDAO exploit, however, the discussion has increasingly shifted toward:
- risk isolation,
- governance structures,
- operational resilience,
- and institutional security guarantees.
Protocols managing large pools of tokenized assets now face growing pressure to demonstrate that cross-chain infrastructure can withstand increasingly sophisticated attack scenarios.
The change is becoming especially important as stablecoins, tokenized assets, and AI-driven applications begin moving larger volumes of value across chains.
AI agents raise the stakes for infrastructure providers
Virtuals’ migration is also notable because the protocol operates outside traditional DeFi use cases.
The company is building infrastructure for autonomous AI agents capable of launching, coordinating, transacting, and monetizing activity across blockchain ecosystems.
That creates additional demands on interoperability systems because payment rails, messaging layers, and transaction coordination increasingly become core infrastructure for autonomous systems rather than optional DeFi tooling.
At the same time, some analysts have cautioned that no interoperability system completely eliminates structural cross-chain risks.
Blockchain analytics platform L2Beat previously argued that even CCIP’s architecture still depends on governance structures, multisigs, and operational monitoring requirements that can create additional risk surfaces across interconnected systems.
Final Summary
- Virtuals migrated more than $700m in VIRTUAL token infrastructure from LayerZero to Chainlink CCIP after conducting a post-exploit security review.
- The move adds to a growing list of protocols leaving LayerZero as interoperability competition increasingly centers on security and institutional resilience.