shield Other · $18.2K loss

Kame Hack: How $18.2K Was Lost in a Other (2025)

On September 2025, Kame was exploited in a other, resulting in approximately $18.2K in losses. That makes the Kame exploit the 339th largest DeFi incident out of 690 documented in our archive.

Attack Mechanics: How the Kame Other Played Out

Exploit Class Applied to Kame

The Kame incident on September 13, 2025 is classified as a Other. A specific exploit class outside the most common buckets. In the full archive, Kame is 1 of 188 documented other incidents.

Kame in Context

At $18.2K, the Kame exploit is a minor (<$1M) event compared to the largest same-class incident in our archive — MIMSpell (2024) at $65M.

Prior Other Before Kame

The nearest other incident before Kame was EverValueCoin, 14 days earlier on August 30, 2025 ($100K lost). The same exploit class surfaced again within the other attack surface.

Kame Vulnerability Signature

The primary source categorises the Kame exploit specifically as “Arbitary External Call”. This narrower label is entity-specific: it reflects how the Kame contract failed, rather than the broad other pattern alone.

Impact & Recovery for Kame

Kame Loss Figure

The Kame exploit caused $18,167 in losses — a minor (<$1M) incident and the 59th largest of 96 documented in 2025.

Where Kame Sits Among Other Attacks

Ranked by loss size, Kame is the 82nd largest of 188 other incidents documented. That puts the Kame loss below the class average of $2.03M.

Timeline Since the Kame Incident

The Kame exploit occurred 7 months ago (213 days). The contract, its fork-block, and the attack transaction remain on-chain and forensically reproducible.

Primary Reference for Kame

Public post-mortem / on-chain analysis for the Kame incident: view source.

FAQ

How much did Kame lose?

The Kame exploit in September 2025 resulted in $18,167 in losses — the 59th largest of 96 DeFi incidents that year.

When did the Kame hack happen?

The Kame exploit was recorded on September 13, 2025 — 213 days ago.

What type of exploit hit Kame?

The Kame incident is classified as a Other. A specific exploit class outside the most common buckets.

How common is the Other pattern seen at Kame?

Our archive contains 188 documented other incidents. The Kame incident is one of them.

How does Kame compare to the largest Other attack?

The largest other incident in our archive is MIMSpell (2024) at $65M. The Kame loss is $18.2K.

What are the potential implications of this system for the future of healthcare?

It could revolutionize patient monitoring by enhancing data security, improving remote care, and facilitating real-time health data analysis.

What additional information is used to enhance predictive capabilities in the methodology?

Correlation between social media activities and price fluctuations, causal connection among prices, and sentiment of users.