James Wynn, the notorious trader who became a crypto folk hero for his billion-dollar leveraged plays on Hyperliquid, is in the spotlight again.

This time, not with a massive trade but with a haunting confession and sharp criticism of the platform that propelled his fame.

James Wynn is Haunted by His Trades

Wynn revealed that he has been struggling with insomnia, panic attacks, and psychological pressure since stepping back from the high-stakes trading that made him a crypto main character.

Still reeling from a $100 million loss, Wynn said he tries to silence the whispers, but the temptation to return remains.

Behind the scenes, Wynn’s fallout with Hyperliquid adds a new twist to his saga. Despite becoming the unofficial face of the decentralized perpetuals exchange, Wynn claims he was never compensated beyond $34,000 in referrals.

“I made $34,000 through referrals on their platform. Which is extremely poor considering the number of sign ups and volume I generated. Their referral program sucks. Other platforms have far better. IMO when CZ launches a dark pool perps DEX, it will put an end to Hyperliquid,” Wynn said in a post.

BeInCrypto recently reported that Changpeng Zhao (CZ) proposed a dark pool-style DEX for perpetual futures. According to CZ, it would help combat front-running and enhance trade privacy.

Wynn alleges he contacted Hyperliquid twice to discuss a potential partnership, given the visibility and volume his trades brought to the platform. However, the team reportedly declined, citing their decentralized model and refusal to offer deals to individuals.

This has fueled speculation from critics like Gumshoe, who suggested the Binance exchange now backs Wynn.

Gumshoe also alluded to Wynn playing a longer “4D chess” game involving market narratives, HYPE token listings, and a potential future DEX from Changpeng Zhao.

While Wynn has denied being paid by Binance, he appears to favor CZ’s vision.

“CZ has the money, network, teams to build something like no other…I hope this encourages Hyperliquid to level up,” Wynn noted in a post.

Wynn’s critics are also raising eyebrows. Analyst DUO Nine speculated that Wynn’s past activity could point to a money-laundering scheme.

Specifically, he may be leveraging intentional liquidations on Hyperliquid while hedging on other exchanges.

There is no evidence to support these claims, but they reflect the mystery surrounding his massive positions and their broader implications.

Despite the chaos, Wynn insists he has peace. In a recent post, he hints at a potential resurgence.

While Wynn remains sidelined, the crypto degen trader may return, but not necessarily on Hyperliquid.