Most people view Bedrock as a yield product. But its long-term role may be much bigger than that.

As crypto evolves, reward opportunities are becoming increasingly spread across different ecosystems. Ethereum, Bitcoin, DePIN, and future sectors all have their own incentives, platforms, and participation methods. For users, accessing these opportunities directly can become increasingly complex.

Bedrock's multi-asset liquid restaking model helps simplify that process. Instead of interacting with multiple ecosystems separately, users can gain exposure through a single protocol while maintaining liquidity. The value is not only in the rewards themselves but also in creating a simpler path to reach them.

This is why Bedrock may gradually evolve into something closer to a routing layer. Users may not come solely for a specific reward opportunity. They may come because Bedrock becomes a convenient gateway to many reward ecosystems at once.

The implication is important. Yield products often compete on incentives, which can change quickly. Infrastructure layers compete on usefulness. If Bedrock becomes a preferred access point for reward participation across multiple ecosystems, its value proposition becomes less dependent on offering the highest rewards at any given moment.

In other words, the most interesting question about Bedrock may not be how much yield it generates today. It may be whether it can become the layer users naturally pass through whenever they want exposure to new reward opportunities.

If that happens, Bedrock could be building infrastructure rather than simply distributing rewards.$BR #bedrocks

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