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Guardian of Billions in Assets, Yet Unable to Sustain Itself: Tally Bows Out After Five Years

By: blockbeats|2026/03/19 18:00:01
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Original Title: "Tally Officially Shuts Down: After Holding On for 5 Years, It Couldn't Endure Anymore"
Original Author: Mach, Foresight News

The crypto community today received heavy news.

On March 17, Tally's official X account posted a lengthy article, with founder Dennison Bertram candidly stating that the company will officially close, and the planned ICO will be completely canceled. After over five years of operation, the team that had provided core infrastructure for decentralized governance chose the most honest yet most difficult way to exit.

Guardian of Billions in Assets, Yet Unable to Sustain Itself: Tally Bows Out After Five Years

Left: CEO Dennison Bertram, Right: CTO Rafael Solari

After the X announcement, numerous DAO members, developers who had participated in proposals and governance through Tally, and project teams that had relied on Tally to stay afloat during the bear market, all left comments in the section with words such as "end of a legend," "tribute," "heartbreak." Tally did not collapse suddenly; it took the step of "having to admit reality."

Why Did It Come to This?

The answer is actually hidden in the most straightforward sentence of the announcement: "At present, at least not now, there is no VC-backed sustainable business model focused on decentralized protocol governance tools."

From its inception, Tally has placed a bet on a specific future—the Ethereum "Infinite Garden" vision: thousands of decentralized protocols, millions of active participants, a robust governance system operating at scale. They believed that the crypto world would need a sophisticated and precise coordination and governance infrastructure, just as the traditional internet needs Slack, Notion, and Airtable.

However, reality dealt them a heavy blow.

Over the past few years, the crypto industry has indeed seen giant success stories, but the product-market fit has almost entirely focused on the payment and speculation tracks. Consumer applications, protocol communities, and organizational ecosystems in real need of heavy governance have not grown to a scale that could sustain an infrastructure company. Tally did not lack effort; they spent a full five years cheering for DAOs, but when the market did not provide enough nourishment, even the firmest belief could not withstand reality.

The announcement made it clear: "You must accept the world as it is, not as you wish it to be." This statement is both harsh and sobering. The governance tool space has not yet reached its time, and Tally chose to take proactive stop-loss measures instead of stubbornly selling tokens and making unfulfillable promises. This restraint, in the current frenetic crypto market, appears especially precious.

Looking at those project teams still preparing to dump tokens, who are still busy harvesting the last iota of liquidity, seems very ironic.

But shutting down does not equate to failure. On the contrary, the report card left by Tally is enough to make the entire industry remember them.

Over five years, the total payment volume circulated through Tally's infrastructure exceeded $1 billion; the systems they helped operate protected over $80 billion in value; over 1 million people visited the platform; hundreds of organizations achieved self-governance through Tally; and tens of millions of token holder addresses have cast proposal votes here.

Even more hardcore: they have never experienced a major security incident.

In the crypto world, this is almost a miracle. DDoS attacks, ongoing infrastructure pressures, the gray areas of the Gensler era's regulations... Tally has withstood all the tests it had to endure, while also casually protecting the entire ecosystem. Whether it was a top DeFi project or the once-infamous Ooki DAO, they were all users of Tally. Tally has demonstrated through action that decentralized governance can work at a scalable level.

The team is indeed Tally's most valuable legacy.

According to publicly available information, Tally's founding core is very strong. Co-founder and CEO Dennison Bertram is a crypto OG, having founded an early btc-42">Bitcoin exchange platform in the Czech Republic (BuyBTC) and later DappHero. Another co-founder and CTO, Rafael Solari, has a computer science background from the University of California, Berkeley, and worked as an engineer at Namebase. He focuses on governance contracts, smart contract security, and infrastructure development.

Dennison repeatedly emphasized in the article: "Tally's team is one of the top engineers and operators in the crypto space." Raph (co-founder) and he will stay on for a short time to wrap things up, but the entire team is actively looking for new opportunities.

The governance app will begin a gradual shutdown at the end of this month. Enterprise partners have continuity plans, while small organizations, due to decentralized principles, have no contact information and can only rely on this post for self-rescue. The interface will remain for a period to give everyone a buffer.

Looking back on Tally's five years, they may not be a central figure in the crypto future, but they certainly have etched their mark on crypto history. Dennison said, "Tally may not be part of the crypto future, but we were part of its story. That's important."

This sentiment echoes the feelings of many veterans.

Crypto is no longer in its "early days." Institutional entry, government endorsements, infrastructure development... These once "blue-sky visions" are becoming reality, along with new challenges being exposed. Tally's shutdown comes at a turning point: a reminder that while the vision is grand, the execution is brutal; dreams may be deferred, but they cannot spin indefinitely.

They once stood at DeFi's most critical hour, weathered attacks, upheld security, and facilitated true governance.

Now, they have chosen to bow out.

The crypto story continues, but the Tally chapter has come to a close.

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