CoinGlass's latest 2025 crypto derivatives market annual report reveals the true evaluation mechanism behind exchange rankings — far from a simple leaderboard, it is based on a multi-dimensional weighted scoring system.



Specifically, the assessment framework centers on core trading data, including key indicators such as trading volume, open interest, order book depth, and slippage costs. These hard data points reflect the liquidity quality and microstructure of the market. But trading data alone is not enough.

The report also incorporates scores across multiple dimensions such as product ecosystem completeness, platform security mechanisms, information transparency, and market quality. This means the evaluation considers not only who has the largest trading volume but also who has a well-developed ecosystem, strict risk controls, and comprehensive user protection. Ultimately, through individual scores and weighted totals, a more representative industry ranking is formed.

This evaluation logic brings more scientific rigor and credibility to exchange rankings and provides a reference for investors choosing platforms. The performance of a leading exchange in this assessment…
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SmartContractPhobiavip
· 2h ago
Oh no, it's the multi-dimensional weighting system again. It sounds very scientific, but who really knows how the weights are assigned? Exchange rankings are essentially a data game. There's nothing wrong with looking at liquidity and slippage metrics, but who sets the standards for transparency in security mechanisms? The real situation is that big platforms can throw money around to produce impressive data, while smaller platforms, no matter how stable, can't turn things around. Just take this report as a reference. So in the end, the top three rankings are still those few, nothing surprising.
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NotSatoshivip
· 2h ago
Oh no, it's that multi-dimensional weighting system again. No matter how complicated it gets, it can't change the essence of some exchanges faking data. --- Good liquidity sounds nice, low slippage costs? Why do I still end up losing everything... --- Finally, someone has clarified this ranking logic. I was really confused before. --- Strict risk control sounds good, but when it comes to actually running away, no one can be trusted... --- Wait, how is the security mechanism evaluated? Is it just another round of self-promotion? --- Order book depth, slippage... these data are way too easy to fake. Do you really trust this ranking? --- Multi-dimensional sounds advanced, but it's really just about who gives the most benefits to CoinGlass😏. --- Ecosystem completeness? I just want a platform that can withdraw funds; everything else is useless. --- This evaluation at least seems a little more reliable than just looking at trading volume. --- Transparency? Top exchanges are all hiding things. Has anyone ever been completely transparent?
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AirdropChaservip
· 2h ago
Hmm, this evaluation system sounds good, but can it really distinguish differences? It still feels like the Shanghai Stock Exchange dominates everything. No matter how scientific the hype, it can't change the current situation. Choosing an exchange still depends on fees and liquidity. Multidimensional weighting? Basically, it's about who dares to reveal their books. Once the report is out, we're just waiting to see which exchange gets called out. CoinGlass wants to do ranking business again, but don't end up with the "alphabetical order" approach. The truly good exchanges have long been voted with their feet; the report is just a late realization. Slippage, order books, risk control... no matter how detailed, it's useless if you can't see the risk of liquidation happening. So who are the top three in the rankings? Keeping us in suspense. In the end, all dimensions boil down to: Is my money safe? What’s the use of scientificity? Investors still care about reputation and fees. Is this the Web3 evaluation method? Fine, let's wait to see influencers overturn it.
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airdrop_huntressvip
· 2h ago
Multi-dimensional assessment? Sounds good, but I still trust transaction fees and liquidity as the two hard indicators. The era where high trading volume alone meant being at the top is over. This report finally has some substance. By the way, what rank does that leading exchange actually hold? Why not just say it directly? Is this standard fair to small-cap trading pairs, or does it only favor large-cap ones? CoinGlass finally clarified the situation, so we don't have to keep guessing.
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