Sui Is Not the Next Solana: Why Evan Cheng Left Facebook to Build the Blockchain That Works
Evan Cheng sat down with me on the 125th episode of When Shift Happens to unpack a bold ambition: fixing the broken foundation of the crypto world.
As the co-founder and CEO of @Mysten_Labs, the team behind the @SuiNetwork, @EvanWeb3 left a comfortable role at Facebook at age 50 to build what no one else in the blockchain space had managed: infrastructure that actually works for users and businesses.
In this deeply personal and technical conversation, he reflects on the failures of decentralisation, lessons from Libra, and what it really means to start over, later in life, with conviction.
The Failure of Decentralisation
From the outset, Evan is blunt: âNothing in this space has won.â Despite the hype, the crypto world has consistently failed to deliver on the promise of decentralisation. Projects either collapse under their own complexity or fall back into centralised controlâsomething Evan has witnessed first-hand. âEvery mistake you make in infrastructure makes it very convenient to fall back to centralisation,â he says.
He calls out Ethereum as a case study in this regression: âWhere are most things happening? On Base. And they donât even pretend itâs decentralised.â For Evan, the issue isnât decentralisation as a concept, itâs the flawed infrastructure that makes decentralisation practically unworkable. Users often fall back to centralised exchanges and services because current systems are too slow, fragile, or costly to trust.
âWhat people forget is that when someone builds a product, it becomes a business,â Evan explains. âAnd if itâs a business, it needs to be profitable. Thatâs why the ideal isnât really working.â
Leaving Facebook to Start Over at 50
Most people see their 50s as a time to slow down. Not Evan Cheng.
After leading Facebookâs now-defunct crypto project, Libra (later Novi), Evan realised meaningful change would require stepping away from big tech. âItâs very difficult to change peopleâs minds in a big company,â he recalls.
By the time Libra was shut down and Novi merged with other teams, Evan had already decided it was time to leave. He departed with no product, no protocol design, and no certainty, only a vision. âWe felt like if we didnât do it, no one would,â he says. Together with four co-founders, most of whom had worked with him at Meta, Evan launched Mysten Labs to build the infrastructure crypto needed.
He also started his first company at 51. âClearly itâs not too late to start,â he says, especially not in crypto, a space typically dominated by twenty-somethings. The bigger challenge was on the personal front. âThereâs a lot of sacrifice,â he admits. From predictable routines to a life of chaos, family, travel, and social responsibilities, everything changed. âMy friends thought Iâd gone to the dark side,â he laughs.
Even his wife needed convincing. Evan didnât negotiate; he built credibility. âI had to prove myself again." Everything from raising funds, building a team, to launching products was about earning that trust and showing progress.
Mysten Labs and the Power of First Principles
Evan isnât interested in iterating on the past. âWeâre not building a better Solana,â he insists. âWeâre identifying the problem, then building the solution.â Sui is not an EVM-compatible chain. It uses the Move programming language, supports composable on-chain data, and includes tools like zkLogin for easier onboarding.
What makes Sui unique, Evan says, is that it brings together design, engineering, and user needs all at once. âItâs all of the above. People fail to understand that. Itâs not just engineering, itâs design.â
Mystenâs five co-founders didnât set out with titles and rigid job descriptions. They just started working. âWe never argued about who owns what,â Evan says. âWe trusted each other, and that trust came from having built things together before.â
Their previous experience together at Meta forged mutual trust, and a clear articulation of each founderâs role helped get VCs on board, despite conventional wisdom advising against funding teams that large.
Even defining what Mysten Labs is remains open-ended. âThe companyâs mission is to enable business transformation through decentralisation,â Evan explains, âbut I donât want to say anything that limits our potential.â
A Culture of Agency and Trust
One of Evanâs deepest convictions is about agency. Mysten was built for high-agency people, the kind who donât wait for permission to act.
This approach stems from frustration with big techâs bureaucracy. âMost people want to do the right thing. But big companies beat that instinct out of you.â At Mysten, the team removes those frictions. Decisions are made by those closest to the problem, guided by data, capability, mutual trust, and overall alignment.
Even among the five co-founders, conflict is navigated with the shared understanding that the relationship comes first. âIf you approach conflict knowing youâll find a path forward, you handle it differently,â Evan says.
What the Future Holds
When asked if he feels like heâs made it, Evan laughs. âWe had a t-shirt that said: âOne year done. 1% solved.â And honestly, I think weâll always be at 1%.â For him, the journey is about constant iteration. But that doesnât mean progress isnât happening. Sui has already attracted users, partners, and real businesses building on its tech. âWeâre seeing people use Sui not just because it exists, but because it works.â
He believes that in 24 months, people will look back and realise their imagination was too small. âThe impact is orders of magnitude bigger than what we can see now.â
So what does success look like to Evan? Itâs not a coin price or a killer app. Itâs feeling free. âIâm happy when Iâm doing what I want to do, surrounded by people I respect and trust. Thatâs everything.â
Final Thoughts
Evan Chengâs journey is a rare combination of technical brilliance, existential reflection, and unshakeable conviction. This episode isnât just about a blockchain; itâs about what happens when someone refuses to accept compromise, even late in life.
Whether youâre a builder, founder, or sceptic, thereâs something vital in this conversation about what crypto could, and still might, become.
đIf you enjoyed reading the summary, head over to When Shift Happens on YouTube or your favorite podcast platform to access the full convo.

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