Dapps are used across a wide range of applications: trading, lending, games, NFTs, DAOs, social tools, and prediction markets. What they share is a specific reason to use blockchain rather than a normal account database, whether that is shared custody, transparent rules, or transferable ownership.
The largest category by public awareness is decentralized finance, where users trade, lend, borrow, and provide liquidity through contracts rather than through a broker's internal ledger. A decentralized exchange routes swaps through liquidity pools or automated order logic instead of a centralized order book. Protocols like Uniswap and Aave are among the most-referenced examples because their contract logic is public and has been running long enough to study in depth.
Outside DeFi, the categories branch quickly. Gaming dapps put assets, item ownership, or in-game rewards on-chain so players actually hold them. DAO apps coordinate voting, treasury decisions, and contributor access through contracts. NFT apps handle minting, trading, membership, and media ownership. The leading prediction markets take a different approach: instead of trading assets, users trade positions on event outcomes, with the contract recording and settling those positions on-chain. Polymarket is the most widely used example of this category.
Common dapp categories include:
- DeFi apps for swaps, lending, borrowing, derivatives, and yield.
- Gaming apps that put assets, rewards, or item ownership on-chain.
- DAO apps that coordinate voting, treasury decisions, and contributor access.
- NFT apps for minting, trading, membership, or media ownership.
- Prediction market apps that let users trade event outcomes.
- Social apps that store identity, content links, or creator access on-chain.
Not every dapp is financial. DAO tools, blockchain games, and on-chain social apps all use wallets and smart contracts but expose very different risks and require different habits from users.