As decentralized finance continues to mature, the industry is rapidly moving toward more efficient, scalable, and institution-ready infrastructure. At the center of this evolution is Sameep Singhania, Co-Founder & CEO of KalqiX and a key force behind QuickSwap, one of Polygon’s leading decentralized exchanges.
With roots in blockchain development dating back to 2017, Sameep has consistently been ahead of the curve, contributing to the growth of DeFi from its early experimental phase to today’s multi-billion-dollar ecosystem. Now, with KalqiX, he is focused on solving some of the most persistent challenges in crypto trading by introducing a zero-knowledge powered central limit order book (CLOB), a model designed to combine the speed of centralized exchanges with the transparency and security of decentralized systems.
In this interview, Sameep shares his journey, key lessons from building in DeFi, and how KalqiX aims to redefine the future of on-chain trading.
Q1. You’ve been building in Web3 since 2017 and played a key role in scaling QuickSwap. What initially drew you to blockchain, and how has your perspective on DeFi evolved over the years?
Ans: In 2017, after leaving my 9 to 6 job, I started freelancing, and that’s when I landed my first blockchain project. I was amazed by what crypto made possible. The ability to transact with anyone across the world within minutes, without needing to trust an intermediary, completely changed my perspective. That was the moment I decided I wanted to build my career in this space.
The goal of DeFi has always been to enable fast, secure, and fair transactions globally, and I’ve been part of this movement since its early days. In the beginning, the focus was mainly on enabling trustless transactions, with less emphasis on user experience and speed. But now that the core idea has been proven, I see the next major shift happening around making DeFi faster, more user-friendly, and more accessible to the masses. We are moving from proof-of-concept to production-grade DeFi.
Q2. QuickSwap became one of Polygon’s most prominent DEXs, reaching significant daily volumes. What were some of the biggest lessons you learned while building and scaling at that level?
Ans: One of the biggest lessons I learned was the importance of building long-term partnerships and integrations. QuickSwap has close to 5,000 integrations, and that network effect is what made it so resilient and powerful on Polygon.
Another major lesson was that user experience matters more than pure technological innovation. No matter how advanced the technology is, adoption ultimately depends on how easy and intuitive the product is for users.
Q3. KalqiX uses a zero-knowledge powered order book. How is this different from traditional DEX models, and why does it matter?
Ans: Traditional DEX models usually rely on AMMs or app chain based designs. While both approaches have their strengths, neither is truly scalable at a global level for high-performance trading.
KalqiX uses zero-knowledge technology to deliver the same kind of efficiency and performance users expect from platforms like Binance or Coinbase, while still remaining trustless. The market can verify that trades are valid, fair, and correctly executed without exposing the sensitive details behind them. This matters because it helps eliminate MEV exploitation, improves execution quality, and delivers high speed while staying on-chain and non-custodial.
Q4. You’ve spoken about ending the “Tradeoff Era” in crypto, a concept at the core of KalqiX. In simple terms, what does this era represent, and how are you planning to bring it to an end?
Ans: The “Tradeoff Era” represents the reality that traders today are forced to compromise. You can have speed, or privacy, or trustlessness, but usually not all three at the same time.
Every public trade reveals strategy. MEV bots quietly extract value from users. And if you want real performance, you are often pushed back toward centralized exchanges, where you give up custody of your assets and have to trust that trades are being executed fairly.
The idea behind KalqiX is simple: we move sensitive trading information such as intent, size, and strategy into a zero-knowledge layer. This allows the market to verify that trades are valid, fair, and correctly executed without exposing the underlying details. In practice, this gives traders centralized exchange level performance with DeFi-level trust, transparency, and verified matching.
Q5. As DeFi matures and institutional players enter the space, how do you see platforms like KalqiX balancing performance with decentralization?
Ans: In my view, we do not need decentralization everywhere. The core purpose of Bitcoin, the first major blockchain application, was to enable truly trustless transactions, and at that time decentralization was the only practical way to achieve that.
But today, with advances in zero-knowledge research and hardware, we can achieve the same level of trustlessness without requiring full decentralization at every layer. I believe this is a massive shift because it allows us to build fully trustless systems at the scale and performance level of platforms like Binance or even traditional exchanges such as NASDAQ.
And that is exactly what serious institutional players need. Every mature market eventually moves toward privacy, fairness, and performance, and I believe that is where DeFi is headed as well.
Final Take
Sameep Singhania’s journey reflects the broader transformation of decentralized finance from early innovation to building robust, high-performance infrastructure. With KalqiX, he is taking a bold step toward eliminating the long-standing tradeoffs between speed, efficiency, and decentralization.
As the next phase of DeFi unfolds, solutions like zero-knowledge powered order books could play a crucial role in bridging the gap between traditional finance and blockchain technology, paving the way for a more seamless and scalable trading experience.
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