Most DeFi problems don’t come from lack of yield.
They come from how fragmented everything is.
Different protocols, different pools, different assumptions. You’re constantly switching context, trying to compare things that aren’t designed to work together.
That’s always felt inefficient to me.
What I’ve been noticing with #Bedrock is a shift away from adding more options, and more toward organizing them.
Instead of pushing users to chase individual strategies, the system starts to handle how capital moves between them.
Routing layers, modular vaults, analytical tools—these aren’t just features. They’re ways to reduce fragmentation without pretending the market is simple.
Because it isn’t.
The complexity is still there. It’s just being managed at a different level.
That’s what makes this interesting from a longer-term perspective.
As DeFi expands, the number of strategies will keep increasing. Navigating them manually doesn’t scale. Systems that can coordinate access while preserving flexibility start to matter more.
That’s how I’m starting to look at what @Bedrock is building.
Not as another yield product, but as an attempt to structure how strategies connect.
And honestly, that feels like a more durable direction. $BR  $CLO $EVAA