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Bitcoin layer-2s face a bear-market reality check

coindesk.com · Jun 17, 2026 at 19:17

Bitcoin layer-2s face a bear-market reality check
coindesk.com Jun 17, 2026

When Botanix announced last week that it would be winding down operations, the Bitcoin layer-2 project did not try to sugarcoat its message.

"It did not work," the team wrote in a social media post announcing the shut down. "At least not in this market and not in this timeline."

Botanix was one of a number of projects pitching Bitcoin as a new frontier for decentralized finance (DeFi), staking, zero-knowledge rollups and smart-contract applications.

Its conclusion was that "making Bitcoin programmable, productive and integrated into real financial activity isn't where real-world users sit right now."

Current market conditions might not be the most fruitful ground for investing in utility and programmability under the hood of the world's original cryptocurrency. Bitcoin's role as a store of value is what attracts the majority of investors, who may not be drawn to other potential functions of BTC when it is not performing its most fundamental one very convincingly.

That raises an uncomfortable question: has the Bitcoin utility boom lost its shine?

The data does little to dispel the skepticism. DefiLlama shows Ethereum with around $39 billion in total value locked, while Bitcoin's onchain DeFi activity sits at less than $5 billion, despite its total market cap being four to five times bigger than Ethereum's.

Rootstock, one of the longest-running Bitcoin smart-contract platforms, has about $101 million in TVL, according to DefiLlama. Citrea, a newer Bitcoin zero-knowledge rollup, has less than $1 million in stablecoin market capitalization.

Yet the builders still standing in the sector argue Botanix's failure does not prove Bitcoin utility is dead. Instead, they say it shows the market is abandoning a more naïve thesis: that Bitcoin needs its own version of Ethereum or Solana.

David Tse, co-founder of staking project Babylon, said the problem with many Bitcoin layer-2 projects is that they are "trying to bootstrap a brand new economy."

Babylon's approach, he said, is different. Rather than create a new application ecosystem on Bitcoin, the project aims to bring bitcoin into existing liquid markets such as Ethereum DeFi.

"We're bringing bitcoin to Ethereum as the first use case," Tse said. "Aave is the biggest DeFi protocol on Ethereum. So we're bringing it to the biggest center of the smart-contract economy."

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