Cosmos Labs acquires Mintscan, forms Seoul-based subsidiary to consolidate ecosystem infrastructure

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Cosmos Labs is pulling off something the Cosmos ecosystem has never seen: putting all its critical infrastructure under one roof. The organization announced on June 4 that it has acquired the Mintscan product suite and established a new Seoul-based subsidiary called Cosmos Labs Korea Co., Ltd., or CLK for short.

The move consolidates Mintscan’s block explorer, the Skip:Go interoperability tool, IBC Eureka, and the Cosmos Hub into a single operational structure.

What the deal actually looks like

Financial terms were not disclosed. What we do know is that more than 15 team members from Mintscan are joining Cosmos Labs through the new CLK entity.

Mintscan’s parent company, Stamper (also known as Cosmostation), retains its other business operations, including validator services.

Discussions about this transition reportedly began back in October 2025, meaning the two sides spent roughly eight months working through the mechanics before going public.

For existing Mintscan users, the practical impact should be minimal. The acquisition is structured to avoid disrupting current operations, which matters when you’re talking about a block explorer that tracks more than 80 chains across the Cosmos ecosystem.

Why Seoul, and why now

The choice of Seoul as CLK’s base isn’t random geography. South Korea has been one of the most important markets for ATOM, the Cosmos Hub’s native token, dating back to the network’s earliest days.

Co-CEO Barry Plunkett noted that the Mintscan team brings nearly a decade of experience building within the Cosmos ecosystem.

CLK Managing Director Una Yu pointed to Seoul’s strategic significance as the rationale for planting the subsidiary’s flag there. CLK gives Cosmos Labs a dedicated presence to pursue enterprise adoption and institutional partnerships across Asia. By consolidating explorers, indexers, APIs, and routing under a specialized subsidiary, Cosmos Labs is creating a dedicated maintenance and integration team.

What this means for investors

Bringing Mintscan, Skip:Go, IBC Eureka, and the Hub under one operator creates a more coherent product story. For institutional investors evaluating whether to deploy capital or build on Cosmos, a single accountable entity managing the core stack is meaningfully different from a patchwork of independent teams.

The consolidation creates single points of failure. If CLK stumbles operationally, or if the integration of more than 15 new team members creates cultural friction, the infrastructure that 80-plus chains depend on could suffer.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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