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September 15, 2025cryptonews logocryptonews

Monero Jumps 7% Despite Largest-Ever Reorg Wiping 117 Transactions

Monero suffered its most severe blockchain reorganization on Sunday, September 14, when 19 blocks were replaced by a competing ￰1￱ incident, which unfolded between block heights 3,499,659 and 3,499,678, lasted roughly 43 minutes and rewrote 36 minutes of chain history, according to blockchain explorer ￰2￱ reorg forced the network to discard 118 previously confirmed transactions, unsettling users and ￰3￱ described the event as unprecedented in Monero’s history and noted it followed recent reports that Qubic had seized control of more than 51% of the network’s hashrate , a position that could allow chain rewrites or double-spending at a cost of around $100,000 per day. $6B Privacy Coin Monero Was Just Hijacked for $100K/Day Monero, the $6 billion privacy coin long touted as one of crypto’s most censorship-resistant networks, has suffered a major setback.

A single mining entity, the Layer-1 blockchain Qubic, claims it seized 51% of Monero’s… — ￰4￱ (@cryptonews) August 18, 2025 Despite the disruption, Monero’s native coin, XMR, saw a price ￰5￱ rose 7% in the past day before retracing to the current ￰6￱ of this press time, XMR trades at $305, extending its weekly and monthly gains to 12% and 29%, ￰7￱ Weekly Price Chart) September 14, 2025 Avdiu Sazan, another community analyst, said the competing blocks were linked to the mining pool ￰8￱ described the event as “a casual 18 blocks reorg.” Providing possible reasons for the recent event, crypto podcaster Xenu suggested Qubic aimed to “stop the bleeding” of XMR’s price, sparking debate on the chain’s ￰9￱ occur when two versions of a blockchain compete, and miners extend different ￰10￱ longest valid chain ultimately becomes the accepted history, discarding blocks on shorter ￰11￱ one- or two-block reorgs occasionally occur on proof-of-work chains due to latency or simultaneous block discovery, Monero’s 19-block reorg is highly unusual and points to concentrated mining power or ￰12￱ episode has reignited discussion around Monero’s network ￰13￱ community has floated potential safeguards, including localized mining, merge mining, or Dash-style ChainLocks, to reduce the risk of deep reorgs and 51% attacks.

None, however, have been adopted, leaving mining pools like Qubic with disproportionate influence. Notably, the latest reorg exceeded Monero’s built-in 10-block protection, underscoring ongoing vulnerabilities in the ￰14￱ Supporters Double Down on the Network Despite Security and Privacy Concerns Monero supporters rallied behind the privacy-focused cryptocurrency this week despite mounting scrutiny after its deepest blockchain reorganization to ￰15￱ took to X, insisting that Monero remains the only asset offering “true freedom,” contrasting its privacy guarantees with Bitcoin’s traceability under know-your-customer (KYC) regimes. “Monero is the only safe haven,” one supporter posted , while another, Meta Ryuk, said the asset poses unique challenges for regulators.

“Bitcoin is a haven for ￰16￱ is a challenge.” Ryuk dismissed claims of traceability, calling them “unfounded.” Critics, however, questioned the network’s reliability following the 43-minute chain rewrite that invalidated 118 confirmed ￰17￱ DAO’s Joel Valenzuela likened the disruption to “Visa going down for 40 minutes,” warning that such instability would be unacceptable for mainstream ￰18￱ people say "crypto is still a casino," people point to Solana ￰19￱ reality, they should point to ￰20￱ the Visa network had 40 minutes of activity disrupted on a whim, and the company wasn't taking it seriously, the company would go to zero immediately.… ￰0￱ — Joel Valenzuela (@TheDesertLynx) September 14, 2025 A crypto analyst said he would stop accepting XMR payments until the issue is resolved, calling the network “unreliable.” Meanwhile, Monero has been previously implicated in the criminal economy, particularly for laundering funds from CSAM sales , according to Chainalysis’s 2024 Crypto Crime ￰21￱ often convert Bitcoin into Monero via instant exchangers, taking advantage of its privacy features and lack of KYC to obscure transactions.

Similarly, Finnish authorities traced Monero in the Julius Kivimäki case , where the hacker allegedly converted Bitcoin ransom payments into Monero via a non-KYC exchange to obscure the funds before transferring them to a dedicated wallet.

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