“…Janus particles and micelles have been intensively studied in the past with a strong focus on spherical structures, which is owed to the fact that cylindrical (1D) or platelet-like (2D) Janus structures are more difficult to realize. − Janus particles can be applied in a broad range of applications, for example, as highly efficient particulate surfactants for emulsion stabilization or compatibilization of polymer blends, as optical nanoprobes and biosensors, for self-propulsion, interfacial catalysis, and superhydrophobic and anti-ice coatings, and many more. 1D (cylindrical or worm-like) patchy micelles can be produced in an efficient manner employing crystallization-driven self-assembly (CDSA) and living CDSA, which allows control over length, length distribution, and corona chemistries. − There are two main concepts for the fabrication of 1D patchy micelles: (i) CDSA of linear triblock terpolymers with a crystallizable middle block, − or of μ-ABC miktoarm star terpolymers, and (ii) CDSA of a mixture of diblock copolymers bearing a common crystallizable block. − The patchy structure of the micellar corona gives rise to specific applications, for example, as templates for the regioselective incorporation of different nanoparticle types, in heterogeneous catalysis, , as compatibilizers in polymer blends or as highly efficient particulate surfactants, , and for the construction of hierarchical superstructures . So far, CDSA of triblock terpolymers with crystallizable middle blocks has always resulted in 1D micelles with a patchy corona.…”