On-chain perpetuals have grown significantly in capability. The mobile experience built around them has not kept pace. Most tools targeting Hyperliquid users were designed for desktop-native crypto traders - fast keyboards, multiple monitors, enough screen real estate to follow a dozen positions at once. On a phone, the same interfaces feel cramped and incomplete.
Dexly was built to close that gap. The platform is a mobile-first trading interface for Hyperliquid, letting users track markets, manage positions, follow assets, and execute trades from their own wallet without signing up for a custodial account. Dexly does not hold funds and does not operate a centralised exchange. It is an interface layer - a cleaner way to interact with infrastructure that already exists.
The founding team describes the problem simply: Hyperliquid is growing fast, but most tools around it were built for the previous generation of on-chain traders. Mobile-first users - people who manage positions between meetings, who want to check exposure on the go without switching to a desktop - do not yet have a tool built specifically for how they trade.
Indie-Built for Active Traders
The team is small and deliberately so. They describe the approach as moving fast and listening directly to user feedback, building the product around what real traders ask for rather than internal assumptions. That constraint - a small team building for a specific, demanding user base - shapes the decisions on what to include and what to leave out.
Dexly is focused on the mobile trader who wants a professional interface without the overhead of a full exchange account. The non-custodial model is not a feature bolted on. It is the starting point - users interact with Hyperliquid through their own wallet, and Dexly handles the experience layer around that interaction.
Dexly is available at dexly.trade