Solana’s privacy narrative sharpens as SOL Strategies buys Darklake Labs

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SOL Strategies is buying Solana‑native zk startup Darklake Labs for $1.2m, bringing its Zyga privacy engine in‑house as Solana’s MEV and confidentiality race heats up.

Summary

  • SOL Strategies will acquire Solana-native zk shop Darklake Labs in a $1.2 million cash-and-stock deal.
  • The Zyga zero-knowledge system moves in-house, targeting private execution and MEV protection on Solana.
  • The acquisition deepens Solana’s privacy and MEV-resistance story as on-chain order flow gets more competitive.

SOL Strategies has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire the assets of Darklake Labs, a Solana-native zero-knowledge (zk) privacy startup, in a $1.2 million transaction split between $200,000 in cash and $1 million in common shares, bringing Darklake’s Zyga zk system directly under its control. The deal, announced on April 7, 2026, will fold Darklake’s core engineering and research team into SOL Strategies’ Solana-focused platform as the firm leans harder into privacy-preserving execution and infrastructure.

Darklake’s flagship product, Zyga, is described by the company as “a dynamic, zero-knowledge proof system built natively for the Solana blockchain that enables private transaction execution while eliminating front-running and sandwich attacks at the point of execution.” Rather than sitting at the application or RPC layer, Zyga plugs into Solana’s transaction-execution pipeline, aiming to hide sensitive order details from would-be arbitrageurs while still allowing validators to verify correctness via zk-proofs. Darklake placed second in the DeFi track of the Solana Radar Global Hackathon, joined the Colosseum Accelerator, and maintains active research partnerships with two Brazilian universities, with a patent filing in progress around its zk architecture.

According to a Newsfile statement, SOL Strategies will pay $200,000 in cash and $1,000,000 in stock for the deal, with the equity portion priced off a five-day volume-weighted average and subject to a four-month lock-up, effectively aligning Darklake’s upside with post-acquisition execution. PANews and Odaily added that the transaction values Darklake at roughly $1.2 million, with most of the consideration issued in shares of SOL Strategies, which trades on the Canadian Securities Exchange and Nasdaq under the ticker STKE.

Post-close, Darklake’s founding team — including former Meta and IBM engineer Vitor Py Braga as technical lead, ex-Coinbase compliance lead Amber Hales, and zk research head Tiago Alves — will join SOL Strategies to drive privacy and zero-knowledge research inside the Solana ecosystem. In an X post confirming the deal, SOL Strategies said it is “bringing zero-knowledge privacy tech in-house to power more MEV-resistant, institution-ready Solana infrastructure,” framing Zyga as a cornerstone for future products.

The acquisition drops into a Solana landscape where privacy and miner extractable value (MEV) are becoming central to the chain’s competitiveness. A previous crypto.news story noted that Solana founder Anatoly Yakovenko has argued that privacy is “not a core factor of product-market fit” today, even as the chain experiments with features like Token‑2022 confidential transfers and early zk projects such as Elusiv and Light Protocol. In that story, analysts said Solana remained behind Ethereum’s zk-heavy Layer 2 stack for institutional-grade privacy, despite its performance edge.

Newer Solana-adjacent projects are already trying to close that gap: Noctura, for example, pitches a dual-mode Solana privacy wallet designed to balance “user confidentiality with listing-grade compliance,” while Marinade Finance has pushed governance proposals to “tackle malicious validators and democratize MEV” across Solana’s validator set. Another crypto.news article on Zero Knowledge Proof, a separate privacy-first Layer 1 that spent over $100 million of internal capital before launch, shows how aggressively capital is now chasing zk infrastructure as traders rotate out of meme assets and into privacy narratives.crypto+4

Against that backdrop, SOL Strategies’ relatively modest $1.2 million bet on Darklake looks less like a speculative punt and more like a cheap attempt to own critical privacy IP and talent early in the Solana cycle. PANews suggested the firm sees Zyga as “a privacy-first execution layer built on Solana,” a view echoed by pseudonymous X researcher ICE, who described Darklake as “essentially a privacy-first execution layer built on Solana, not just a platform you trade on, but a system that rewires how transactions hit the mempool.” If SOL Strategies can actually deploy Zyga across production order flow, that may turn one of Solana’s perceived weaknesses — transparent, MEV-exposed order books — into a differentiator for institutions that want speed without bleeding alpha.

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