Outset PR’s Q4 2025 analysis shows crypto media in the U.S. doesn’t really work like an open marketplace anymore. It works more like venture capital. A handful of outlets get most of the attention, distribution, and repeat readership, and everyone else is left pitching for scraps.
The system isn’t built around equal competition. It’s built around compounding visibility. According to the latest Outset Data Pulse report, traffic dropped hard, but the hierarchy stayed exactly where it was: the same few outlets still held most of the attention.

This follows the same visibility pressure documented in Western Europe during Q1, where four in five crypto outlets lost reach as regulation kicked in and visibility got tougher.
The American crypto press is now a market where attention behaves less like a feed and more like allocation: a small top tier absorbs nearly everything, while the long tail fights over what remains.
The Snowball Effect in the U.S. Crypto Media
Outset PR reports that total visits across U.S. crypto-native publishers dropped from roughly 148 million in Q3 to about 106 million in Q4. That’s a steep contraction in a single quarter, and it tracks closely with the broader cooling of market volatility.
Source: Outset Data Pulse
The interesting part was the concentration. Even in a quieter quarter, readers kept circling back to the same names.
Of 82 crypto-native publishers tracked in the USA, just 53 tier-1 outlets (defined as those with more than 400,000 monthly visits) captured more than 95% of traffic. Just that group saw over 101 million visits during the quarter. The remaining 29 publishers shared less than 5% of demand.
Source: Outset Data Pulse
In most media ecosystems, people expect some kind of middle class: outlets that aren’t giants but still command meaningful share.
That middle is disappearing in American crypto publishing.
Tier-2 publishers (the next band down) controlled only around 3.8% of total traffic. Tier-3 outlets were left with just above 1%.
Once a website falls outside the top layer, it is not competing for slightly less attention but for almost none. The dynamic looks less like journalism and more like fundraising: a few winners raise the round, everyone else stays in the pitch deck stage.
Bookmarks Matter More Than Algorithms Now
Habit is keeping the top tier on top. Even in a quarter where overall visits fell hard, direct traffic still made up about 44% of total U.S. crypto media visits. That’s the highest direct share Outset PR has observed across any region in recent reporting. Direct traffic plays a similar role in Eastern Europe, but in the U.S., it’s even more concentrated at the top.
Nearly one out of every two visits came from someone arriving intentionally: typing the URL, clicking a bookmark, returning out of routine. That’s owned audience.
This is where the VC comparison becomes hard to shake. In a downturn, speculative money disappears first. The only thing left is conviction capital.
Crypto media is starting to look the same. Casual readers leave, the core audience stays, and the publishers who already have that core keep absorbing the market.
Mainstream Media Fell Less and Crypto Media Is Still More Cyclical
Outset PR also tracked mainstream financial outlets separately, and the contrast matters.
Mainstream media traffic declined by around 14% over the same period, which is certainly a drop, but nothing like crypto-native volatility.
Crypto publishers remain far more exposed to attention cycles. When the market runs hot, traffic floods in. When the chart goes quiet, the casual layer pulls back fast.
The pullback mostly leaves the familiar names in view. Once volatility fades, the outlets that survive aren’t the ones that happened to rank well last month. They’re the ones people already trust enough to return to directly.
Most Social Clicks Still Come From One Place
Social media didn’t provide much of a safety net. In Q4, social traffic represented only about 6% of total visits across U.S. crypto-native publishers. And within that already-small slice, concentration was extreme.
X accounted for almost 71% of all social-driven traffic (roughly 6 million visits). Reddit and YouTube followed far behind, each contributing under 10%.
So the entire “social discovery layer” in U.S. crypto media is basically one platform.
If X is where attention moves, then crypto publishers are exposed to one algorithm, one engagement cycle, one set of platform decisions.
AI Is Becoming the New Gatekeeper And Most Sites Still Don’t Benefit
With search and social bringing in less traffic, AI began showing up as the next discovery channel. Western Europe was an early preview: once AI became a front door, most outlets simply didn’t get surfaced.
AI-driven referrals made up about 25% of all referral traffic across U.S. crypto-native outlets. ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google’s AI Overviews, and other AI tools are quickly becoming where readers get their first crypto answers.
Outset PR’s data shows a sharp split. Only 26 outlets receive less than 20% of their referrals from AI, while most exceed 30-40%.
Still, most publishers still receive almost nothing from AI in absolute terms. The majority of crypto sites that rarely appear in AI answers get less than 1% of their total traffic from these tools.
Maximilian Fondé, senior media analyst at Outset PR, described it simply: “AI discovery behaves less like a feed and more like a credit filter. Either your content qualifies, or it doesn’t.”
Growth Leaders Aren’t the Giants
One of the strangest signals in Q4 was that the biggest brands weren’t necessarily the ones growing fastest.
Outset PR’s Composite Score rankings, which blend traffic gains, growth rate, and engagement quality, surfaced a mix of incumbents and smaller AI-optimized outlets.
U.Today posted more than 66% quarterly growth, CryptoNinjas grew over 33%, and a number of mid-sized publishers did better than legacy names.
The biggest players still have the advantage, but the way people find news is shifting enough to move a few names around at the top.
What This Means Going Into 2026
What this suggests going into 2026 is that crypto publishing should be more about becoming a default destination even when nothing is happening.
Traffic will come back in the next cycle, but the outlets that benefit most won’t be the ones chasing volatility-driven clicks. They’ll be the ones readers return to out of habit and the ones AI tools cite automatically when people ask basic questions.
For smaller websites, the takeaway is that visibility now has to be built deliberately. In the U.S., the strongest media brands are starting to look less like content machines and more like infrastructure: part of the routine, not part of the noise.


