As blockchain technology matures, the industry faces a critical challenge: balancing transparency with privacy. Most public blockchains expose all transaction data, creating risks for enterprises and individuals. This tension has sparked debate about whether decentralization must sacrifice confidentiality. Fahmi Syed, President of the Midnight Foundation, believes there’s a better path forward. During Token2049 Singapore at the main event venue, he outlined to BeInCrypto Midnight’s vision for “rational privacy.” Midnight’s approach uses zero-knowledge-proofs-based smart contracts to unlock selective disclosure: the ability to control what you share, when, and with whom. Please briefly explain Midnight Network and how it differs from other privacy-focused blockchains. Midnight is a new layer one blockchain built on advancements in zero-knowledge proofs. We’ve built a dual-state, public-and-private ledger architecture that enables applications to validate sensitive data using cryptographic proofs.  Through zero-knowledge proofs and purpose-built smart contract disclosure mechanisms, individuals, corporations, and machines can decide what they share, when they share it, and with whom they share it. This is what we call “rational privacy”—selective, programmable privacy that protects sensitive data by default while still enabling compliance and auditability when required. Today, most public blockchains are transparent or pseudo-anonymous, but pseudo-anonymity is not privacy – over time, identities and wallets can be exposed, tracked, or compromised. How does your approach differ from previous attempts to add privacy to public blockchains? Public ZK chains started with the likes of Monero and Zcash. These privacy-focused networks showcased how zero-knowledge proofs could protect sensitive data, but because their tokens acted as stores of value, they raised compliance concerns for not only regulators, but corporates who must adhere to KYC/KYB procedures. The next evolution was the rise in ZK rollups or ZK chains, which primarily aimed to scale blockchain transactions and later incorporated some privacy features. But when you try to retrofit privacy, there’s always a risk of exposure. At Midnight, we’ve baked privacy into the core of the network, giving you the ability to protect sensitive data and metadata while remaining auditable on-chain. This essentially enables you to build technology and applications that preserve privacy without sacrificing compliance. What is Midnight’s mechanism that enables both privacy and compliance? Private data shouldn’t sit on a blockchain. The most valuable use of private data is when value can be derived while the underlying information remains under the owner’s exclusive control. One way this can happen is via proofs and attestations. For example, proofs of identity, ownership, or accreditation. These proofs function like keys that gateway your access into deeper levels of a product, service or network.  Today, valuable data sits in silos, completely underutilised. What Midnight can do is bring such silos together to unlock shared value, without risk of exposure. Instead of sharing raw data across networks, you can provide attestations, or proofs that enable untrusted parties to operate together in a trusted manner. In this way, I see Midnight as a truth layer, through our smart contracts, you can allow disclosures or enable different parties to validate information without risk.  With Midnight, you get to choose what, when, and with whom you’re disclosing information to. People often think of privacy as trying to obfuscate or shield. We believe privacy is a starting place for compliance. Privacy with selective disclosure will enable better compliance. Midnight uses a dual-component tokenomics system with NIGHT and DUST. What motivated this design choice, and how does it address the economic challenges facing other Layer-1 blockchains? The economic model today for most blockchains is not only confusing, it’s broken. For example, you may have a Samsung phone, but you don’t pay for your Samsung phone with your Samsung shares. Why? Because your shares are an investment, your phone is just a product that you use, or “consume”. Today in Ethereum, Cardano, Solana, and other L1s, the tokens you select for investment purposes are the same assets you use to pay for transaction fees or “gas”. This is counterintuitive – for example, what happens when the token price goes up in value? Transaction costs increase, especially during periods of network congestion, meaning you’re cannibalizing your investment just to make a transaction, essentially grinding the network to a halt.  At Midnight, we’ve separated ownership and utility from consumption. NIGHT is our native utility token that gives you ownership and governance of Midnight. NIGHT generates DUST, which is a renewable, shielded resource. DUST does not function as a store of value, as it decays within seven days. Instead of paying for transactions with NIGHT, you pay with DUST, and if you own NIGHT, your supply of DUST will continue to replenish. This model ensures you’re not cannibalising your primary asset just to pay to use the network. The Glacier Drop has attracted significant attention in the community. Can you share its main objectives and how it supports Midnight’s vision? We’re so confident in our technology and its capabilities that we’re giving away 100 percent of the token supply of NIGHT through a multi-phase distribution process, starting with the Glacier Drop, which is open to users from across eight major blockchain ecosystems. If you were holding at least $100 worth of BTC, ETH, ADA, SOL, AVAX, BNB, XRP, or BAT tokens in a self-custody wallet on the snapshot date, you are eligible to come and claim. The amount of NIGHT you can claim corresponds to your ownership in the other eligible chains. The more you have there, the more NIGHT you’ll receive. Participants from each of these ecosystems have the opportunity to come and claim before we open this up to anyone during the Scavenger Mine phase.  Scavenger Mine allows anybody from any ecosystem or walk of life to claim a portion of the unclaimed tokens from Glacier Drop. Only after the end of Scavenger Mine is there a distribution to the Midnight Foundation, the on-chain treasury, and the on-chain reserves. You recently announced a collaboration with Google Cloud. How does this partnership advance Midnight’s enterprise adoption goals, and what does it mean for bringing traditional Web2 companies into the blockchain space? That’s right, our collaboration with Google Cloud is bringing enterprise-grade infrastructure support to our network, which will give institutions and others more confidence to utilize Midnight’s privacy-enhancing infrastructure. Through this partnership and others, millions of users and thousands of corporate clients are welcome to utilize Midnight’s technology to bring enhanced privacy functionality to their products and services. Can you elaborate on this partnership with a real-world example? A healthcare company in Turkey with three million patients is currently working with us to explore how they can leverage blockchain infrastructure to generate proofs of their patients’ medical histories. Our strategy is to start with partners with slightly lower regulatory hurdles for proof of concept. Once we can demonstrate viability in one area, we can extend it to another. For example, now we’re in conversations with a large hospital in California that’s looking to use Midnight for cross-clinical trials with other external partners. They want to protect sensitive patient data, so they’re looking at how Midnight can bring together different silos of medical history and records to achieve better outcomes for their patients and the medical industry as a whole, without ever exposing the data on the chain. Can you walk us through Midnight’s roadmap from testnet to mainnet launch? What are the primary milestones and goals for the rest of 2025 and beyond? Our primary goal for this year is to complete Glacier Drop successfully, launch our token, as well as preparing for mainnet launch. From there, our focus will be on how we bring our technology to market while still maintaining our path to decentralization. To build institutional confidence, our strategy is to launch with a consortium of federated nodes, made up of ten trusted partners running validators, to provide the robustness, speed, and scalability that’s needed for enterprises to operate securely and confidently.  As we scale, through feature releases, upgrades, and with partners bringing in more transactional volume, Midnight will gradually develop into a decentralized ecosystem. To support this, when we launch on mainnet, we’ll be running an incentivized testnet in parallel to the federated mainnet. Eventually, the two will converge, and we will end up with a fully decentralized blockchain where validation is not just from trusted partners, but from a wider group of 100 to 200 validators.As blockchain technology matures, the industry faces a critical challenge: balancing transparency with privacy. Most public blockchains expose all transaction data, creating risks for enterprises and individuals. This tension has sparked debate about whether decentralization must sacrifice confidentiality. Fahmi Syed, President of the Midnight Foundation, believes there’s a better path forward. During Token2049 Singapore at the main event venue, he outlined to BeInCrypto Midnight’s vision for “rational privacy.” Midnight’s approach uses zero-knowledge-proofs-based smart contracts to unlock selective disclosure: the ability to control what you share, when, and with whom. Please briefly explain Midnight Network and how it differs from other privacy-focused blockchains. Midnight is a new layer one blockchain built on advancements in zero-knowledge proofs. We’ve built a dual-state, public-and-private ledger architecture that enables applications to validate sensitive data using cryptographic proofs.  Through zero-knowledge proofs and purpose-built smart contract disclosure mechanisms, individuals, corporations, and machines can decide what they share, when they share it, and with whom they share it. This is what we call “rational privacy”—selective, programmable privacy that protects sensitive data by default while still enabling compliance and auditability when required. Today, most public blockchains are transparent or pseudo-anonymous, but pseudo-anonymity is not privacy – over time, identities and wallets can be exposed, tracked, or compromised. How does your approach differ from previous attempts to add privacy to public blockchains? Public ZK chains started with the likes of Monero and Zcash. These privacy-focused networks showcased how zero-knowledge proofs could protect sensitive data, but because their tokens acted as stores of value, they raised compliance concerns for not only regulators, but corporates who must adhere to KYC/KYB procedures. The next evolution was the rise in ZK rollups or ZK chains, which primarily aimed to scale blockchain transactions and later incorporated some privacy features. But when you try to retrofit privacy, there’s always a risk of exposure. At Midnight, we’ve baked privacy into the core of the network, giving you the ability to protect sensitive data and metadata while remaining auditable on-chain. This essentially enables you to build technology and applications that preserve privacy without sacrificing compliance. What is Midnight’s mechanism that enables both privacy and compliance? Private data shouldn’t sit on a blockchain. The most valuable use of private data is when value can be derived while the underlying information remains under the owner’s exclusive control. One way this can happen is via proofs and attestations. For example, proofs of identity, ownership, or accreditation. These proofs function like keys that gateway your access into deeper levels of a product, service or network.  Today, valuable data sits in silos, completely underutilised. What Midnight can do is bring such silos together to unlock shared value, without risk of exposure. Instead of sharing raw data across networks, you can provide attestations, or proofs that enable untrusted parties to operate together in a trusted manner. In this way, I see Midnight as a truth layer, through our smart contracts, you can allow disclosures or enable different parties to validate information without risk.  With Midnight, you get to choose what, when, and with whom you’re disclosing information to. People often think of privacy as trying to obfuscate or shield. We believe privacy is a starting place for compliance. Privacy with selective disclosure will enable better compliance. Midnight uses a dual-component tokenomics system with NIGHT and DUST. What motivated this design choice, and how does it address the economic challenges facing other Layer-1 blockchains? The economic model today for most blockchains is not only confusing, it’s broken. For example, you may have a Samsung phone, but you don’t pay for your Samsung phone with your Samsung shares. Why? Because your shares are an investment, your phone is just a product that you use, or “consume”. Today in Ethereum, Cardano, Solana, and other L1s, the tokens you select for investment purposes are the same assets you use to pay for transaction fees or “gas”. This is counterintuitive – for example, what happens when the token price goes up in value? Transaction costs increase, especially during periods of network congestion, meaning you’re cannibalizing your investment just to make a transaction, essentially grinding the network to a halt.  At Midnight, we’ve separated ownership and utility from consumption. NIGHT is our native utility token that gives you ownership and governance of Midnight. NIGHT generates DUST, which is a renewable, shielded resource. DUST does not function as a store of value, as it decays within seven days. Instead of paying for transactions with NIGHT, you pay with DUST, and if you own NIGHT, your supply of DUST will continue to replenish. This model ensures you’re not cannibalising your primary asset just to pay to use the network. The Glacier Drop has attracted significant attention in the community. Can you share its main objectives and how it supports Midnight’s vision? We’re so confident in our technology and its capabilities that we’re giving away 100 percent of the token supply of NIGHT through a multi-phase distribution process, starting with the Glacier Drop, which is open to users from across eight major blockchain ecosystems. If you were holding at least $100 worth of BTC, ETH, ADA, SOL, AVAX, BNB, XRP, or BAT tokens in a self-custody wallet on the snapshot date, you are eligible to come and claim. The amount of NIGHT you can claim corresponds to your ownership in the other eligible chains. The more you have there, the more NIGHT you’ll receive. Participants from each of these ecosystems have the opportunity to come and claim before we open this up to anyone during the Scavenger Mine phase.  Scavenger Mine allows anybody from any ecosystem or walk of life to claim a portion of the unclaimed tokens from Glacier Drop. Only after the end of Scavenger Mine is there a distribution to the Midnight Foundation, the on-chain treasury, and the on-chain reserves. You recently announced a collaboration with Google Cloud. How does this partnership advance Midnight’s enterprise adoption goals, and what does it mean for bringing traditional Web2 companies into the blockchain space? That’s right, our collaboration with Google Cloud is bringing enterprise-grade infrastructure support to our network, which will give institutions and others more confidence to utilize Midnight’s privacy-enhancing infrastructure. Through this partnership and others, millions of users and thousands of corporate clients are welcome to utilize Midnight’s technology to bring enhanced privacy functionality to their products and services. Can you elaborate on this partnership with a real-world example? A healthcare company in Turkey with three million patients is currently working with us to explore how they can leverage blockchain infrastructure to generate proofs of their patients’ medical histories. Our strategy is to start with partners with slightly lower regulatory hurdles for proof of concept. Once we can demonstrate viability in one area, we can extend it to another. For example, now we’re in conversations with a large hospital in California that’s looking to use Midnight for cross-clinical trials with other external partners. They want to protect sensitive patient data, so they’re looking at how Midnight can bring together different silos of medical history and records to achieve better outcomes for their patients and the medical industry as a whole, without ever exposing the data on the chain. Can you walk us through Midnight’s roadmap from testnet to mainnet launch? What are the primary milestones and goals for the rest of 2025 and beyond? Our primary goal for this year is to complete Glacier Drop successfully, launch our token, as well as preparing for mainnet launch. From there, our focus will be on how we bring our technology to market while still maintaining our path to decentralization. To build institutional confidence, our strategy is to launch with a consortium of federated nodes, made up of ten trusted partners running validators, to provide the robustness, speed, and scalability that’s needed for enterprises to operate securely and confidently.  As we scale, through feature releases, upgrades, and with partners bringing in more transactional volume, Midnight will gradually develop into a decentralized ecosystem. To support this, when we launch on mainnet, we’ll be running an incentivized testnet in parallel to the federated mainnet. Eventually, the two will converge, and we will end up with a fully decentralized blockchain where validation is not just from trusted partners, but from a wider group of 100 to 200 validators.

Midnight Redefines Blockchain Privacy With Zero-Knowledge and Rational Design

2025/10/09 11:00

As blockchain technology matures, the industry faces a critical challenge: balancing transparency with privacy. Most public blockchains expose all transaction data, creating risks for enterprises and individuals. This tension has sparked debate about whether decentralization must sacrifice confidentiality.

Fahmi Syed, President of the Midnight Foundation, believes there’s a better path forward. During Token2049 Singapore at the main event venue, he outlined to BeInCrypto Midnight’s vision for “rational privacy.” Midnight’s approach uses zero-knowledge-proofs-based smart contracts to unlock selective disclosure: the ability to control what you share, when, and with whom.

Please briefly explain Midnight Network and how it differs from other privacy-focused blockchains.

Midnight is a new layer one blockchain built on advancements in zero-knowledge proofs. We’ve built a dual-state, public-and-private ledger architecture that enables applications to validate sensitive data using cryptographic proofs. 

Through zero-knowledge proofs and purpose-built smart contract disclosure mechanisms, individuals, corporations, and machines can decide what they share, when they share it, and with whom they share it. This is what we call “rational privacy”—selective, programmable privacy that protects sensitive data by default while still enabling compliance and auditability when required.

Today, most public blockchains are transparent or pseudo-anonymous, but pseudo-anonymity is not privacy – over time, identities and wallets can be exposed, tracked, or compromised.

How does your approach differ from previous attempts to add privacy to public blockchains?

Public ZK chains started with the likes of Monero and Zcash. These privacy-focused networks showcased how zero-knowledge proofs could protect sensitive data, but because their tokens acted as stores of value, they raised compliance concerns for not only regulators, but corporates who must adhere to KYC/KYB procedures.

The next evolution was the rise in ZK rollups or ZK chains, which primarily aimed to scale blockchain transactions and later incorporated some privacy features. But when you try to retrofit privacy, there’s always a risk of exposure.

At Midnight, we’ve baked privacy into the core of the network, giving you the ability to protect sensitive data and metadata while remaining auditable on-chain. This essentially enables you to build technology and applications that preserve privacy without sacrificing compliance.

What is Midnight’s mechanism that enables both privacy and compliance?

Private data shouldn’t sit on a blockchain. The most valuable use of private data is when value can be derived while the underlying information remains under the owner’s exclusive control. One way this can happen is via proofs and attestations. For example, proofs of identity, ownership, or accreditation. These proofs function like keys that gateway your access into deeper levels of a product, service or network. 

Today, valuable data sits in silos, completely underutilised. What Midnight can do is bring such silos together to unlock shared value, without risk of exposure. Instead of sharing raw data across networks, you can provide attestations, or proofs that enable untrusted parties to operate together in a trusted manner. In this way, I see Midnight as a truth layer, through our smart contracts, you can allow disclosures or enable different parties to validate information without risk. 

With Midnight, you get to choose what, when, and with whom you’re disclosing information to. People often think of privacy as trying to obfuscate or shield. We believe privacy is a starting place for compliance. Privacy with selective disclosure will enable better compliance.

Midnight uses a dual-component tokenomics system with NIGHT and DUST. What motivated this design choice, and how does it address the economic challenges facing other Layer-1 blockchains?

The economic model today for most blockchains is not only confusing, it’s broken. For example, you may have a Samsung phone, but you don’t pay for your Samsung phone with your Samsung shares. Why? Because your shares are an investment, your phone is just a product that you use, or “consume”.

Today in Ethereum, Cardano, Solana, and other L1s, the tokens you select for investment purposes are the same assets you use to pay for transaction fees or “gas”. This is counterintuitive – for example, what happens when the token price goes up in value? Transaction costs increase, especially during periods of network congestion, meaning you’re cannibalizing your investment just to make a transaction, essentially grinding the network to a halt. 

At Midnight, we’ve separated ownership and utility from consumption. NIGHT is our native utility token that gives you ownership and governance of Midnight. NIGHT generates DUST, which is a renewable, shielded resource. DUST does not function as a store of value, as it decays within seven days. Instead of paying for transactions with NIGHT, you pay with DUST, and if you own NIGHT, your supply of DUST will continue to replenish. This model ensures you’re not cannibalising your primary asset just to pay to use the network.

The Glacier Drop has attracted significant attention in the community. Can you share its main objectives and how it supports Midnight’s vision?

We’re so confident in our technology and its capabilities that we’re giving away 100 percent of the token supply of NIGHT through a multi-phase distribution process, starting with the Glacier Drop, which is open to users from across eight major blockchain ecosystems. If you were holding at least $100 worth of BTC, ETH, ADA, SOL, AVAX, BNB, XRP, or BAT tokens in a self-custody wallet on the snapshot date, you are eligible to come and claim. The amount of NIGHT you can claim corresponds to your ownership in the other eligible chains. The more you have there, the more NIGHT you’ll receive. Participants from each of these ecosystems have the opportunity to come and claim before we open this up to anyone during the Scavenger Mine phase. 

Scavenger Mine allows anybody from any ecosystem or walk of life to claim a portion of the unclaimed tokens from Glacier Drop. Only after the end of Scavenger Mine is there a distribution to the Midnight Foundation, the on-chain treasury, and the on-chain reserves.

You recently announced a collaboration with Google Cloud. How does this partnership advance Midnight’s enterprise adoption goals, and what does it mean for bringing traditional Web2 companies into the blockchain space?

That’s right, our collaboration with Google Cloud is bringing enterprise-grade infrastructure support to our network, which will give institutions and others more confidence to utilize Midnight’s privacy-enhancing infrastructure. Through this partnership and others, millions of users and thousands of corporate clients are welcome to utilize Midnight’s technology to bring enhanced privacy functionality to their products and services.

Can you elaborate on this partnership with a real-world example?

A healthcare company in Turkey with three million patients is currently working with us to explore how they can leverage blockchain infrastructure to generate proofs of their patients’ medical histories. Our strategy is to start with partners with slightly lower regulatory hurdles for proof of concept. Once we can demonstrate viability in one area, we can extend it to another. For example, now we’re in conversations with a large hospital in California that’s looking to use Midnight for cross-clinical trials with other external partners. They want to protect sensitive patient data, so they’re looking at how Midnight can bring together different silos of medical history and records to achieve better outcomes for their patients and the medical industry as a whole, without ever exposing the data on the chain.

Can you walk us through Midnight’s roadmap from testnet to mainnet launch? What are the primary milestones and goals for the rest of 2025 and beyond?

Our primary goal for this year is to complete Glacier Drop successfully, launch our token, as well as preparing for mainnet launch. From there, our focus will be on how we bring our technology to market while still maintaining our path to decentralization. To build institutional confidence, our strategy is to launch with a consortium of federated nodes, made up of ten trusted partners running validators, to provide the robustness, speed, and scalability that’s needed for enterprises to operate securely and confidently. 

As we scale, through feature releases, upgrades, and with partners bringing in more transactional volume, Midnight will gradually develop into a decentralized ecosystem. To support this, when we launch on mainnet, we’ll be running an incentivized testnet in parallel to the federated mainnet. Eventually, the two will converge, and we will end up with a fully decentralized blockchain where validation is not just from trusted partners, but from a wider group of 100 to 200 validators.

Piyasa Fırsatı
ZeroLend Logosu
ZeroLend Fiyatı(ZERO)
$0.000007841
$0.000007841$0.000007841
-2.78%
USD
ZeroLend (ZERO) Canlı Fiyat Grafiği
Sorumluluk Reddi: Bu sitede yeniden yayınlanan makaleler, halka açık platformlardan alınmıştır ve yalnızca bilgilendirme amaçlıdır. MEXC'nin görüşlerini yansıtmayabilir. Tüm hakları telif sahiplerine aittir. Herhangi bir içeriğin üçüncü taraf haklarını ihlal ettiğini düşünüyorsanız, kaldırılması için lütfen [email protected] ile iletişime geçin. MEXC, içeriğin doğruluğu, eksiksizliği veya güncelliği konusunda hiçbir garanti vermez ve sağlanan bilgilere dayalı olarak alınan herhangi bir eylemden sorumlu değildir. İçerik, finansal, yasal veya diğer profesyonel tavsiye niteliğinde değildir ve MEXC tarafından bir tavsiye veya onay olarak değerlendirilmemelidir.

Ayrıca Şunları da Beğenebilirsiniz

Ethereum unveils roadmap focusing on scaling, interoperability, and security at Japan Dev Conference

Ethereum unveils roadmap focusing on scaling, interoperability, and security at Japan Dev Conference

The post Ethereum unveils roadmap focusing on scaling, interoperability, and security at Japan Dev Conference appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Key Takeaways Ethereum’s new roadmap was presented by Vitalik Buterin at the Japan Dev Conference. Short-term priorities include Layer 1 scaling and raising gas limits to enhance transaction throughput. Vitalik Buterin presented Ethereum’s development roadmap at the Japan Dev Conference today, outlining the blockchain platform’s priorities across multiple timeframes. The short-term goals focus on scaling solutions and increasing Layer 1 gas limits to improve transaction capacity. Mid-term objectives target enhanced cross-Layer 2 interoperability and faster network responsiveness to create a more seamless user experience across different scaling solutions. The long-term vision emphasizes building a secure, simple, quantum-resistant, and formally verified minimalist Ethereum network. This approach aims to future-proof the platform against emerging technological threats while maintaining its core functionality. The roadmap presentation comes as Ethereum continues to compete with other blockchain platforms for market share in the smart contract and decentralized application space. Source: https://cryptobriefing.com/ethereum-roadmap-scaling-interoperability-security-japan/
Paylaş
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 00:25
USD/INR opens flat on hopes of RBI’s follow-through intervention

USD/INR opens flat on hopes of RBI’s follow-through intervention

The post USD/INR opens flat on hopes of RBI’s follow-through intervention appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The Indian Rupee (INR) opens on a flat note against
Paylaş
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/12/18 13:33
A Netflix ‘KPop Demon Hunters’ Short Film Has Been Rated For Release

A Netflix ‘KPop Demon Hunters’ Short Film Has Been Rated For Release

The post A Netflix ‘KPop Demon Hunters’ Short Film Has Been Rated For Release appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. KPop Demon Hunters Netflix Everyone has wondered what may be the next step for KPop Demon Hunters as an IP, given its record-breaking success on Netflix. Now, the answer may be something exactly no one predicted. According to a new filing with the MPA, something called Debut: A KPop Demon Hunters Story has been rated PG by the ratings body. It’s listed alongside some other films, and this is obviously something that has not been publicly announced. A short film could be well, very short, a few minutes, and likely no more than ten. Even that might be pushing it. Using say, Pixar shorts as a reference, most are between 4 and 8 minutes. The original movie is an hour and 36 minutes. The “Debut” in the title indicates some sort of flashback, perhaps to when HUNTR/X first arrived on the scene before they blew up. Previously, director Maggie Kang has commented about how there were more backstory components that were supposed to be in the film that were cut, but hinted those could be explored in a sequel. But perhaps some may be put into a short here. I very much doubt those scenes were fully produced and simply cut, but perhaps they were finished up for this short film here. When would Debut: KPop Demon Hunters theoretically arrive? I’m not sure the other films on the list are much help. Dead of Winter is out in less than two weeks. Mother Mary does not have a release date. Ne Zha 2 came out earlier this year. I’ve only seen news stories saying The Perfect Gamble was supposed to come out in Q1 2025, but I’ve seen no evidence that it actually has. KPop Demon Hunters Netflix It could be sooner rather than later as Netflix looks to capitalize…
Paylaş
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 02:23