Last weekend, I met up with a neighbor who's into crypto at a tourist spot about 100km away.
He showed up right on time.
I, on the other hand, was nearly an hour late.
He asked, "Which route did you take?"
I could only chuckle: "I’m not even sure anymore. There are just too many roads and turns these days."
At that moment, I realized it wasn't about a lack of paths, but rather an overload of choices.
Every turn represents a decision.
Too many options can create decision fatigue.
Maybe this isn't just about a road trip.
In the BTCFi space right now, opportunities are popping up more than ever.
Each new opportunity comes with a new decision to make.
When opportunities become abundant, what becomes scarce isn't the opportunity itself.
It's time, attention, and the ability to react.
Perhaps when a system matures enough, the challenge isn't about creating more choices.
It’s about lowering the decision-making costs.
That's why I've been keeping an eye on Bedrock 2.0 lately.
Not because @Bedrock is creating new opportunities.
But because #Bedrock poses a different question:
As opportunities increase, how can users access them without spending too much time deciding among them?
It seems the most mature systems aren't necessarily those that create the most options.
Rather, they are the systems that enable people to make fewer decisions.
If BTCFi continues to expand in the future, will the advantage lie with systems that create more choices, or those that help users access them with fewer decisions?
$BR
He showed up right on time.
I, on the other hand, was nearly an hour late.
He asked, "Which route did you take?"
I could only chuckle: "I’m not even sure anymore. There are just too many roads and turns these days."
At that moment, I realized it wasn't about a lack of paths, but rather an overload of choices.
Every turn represents a decision.
Too many options can create decision fatigue.
Maybe this isn't just about a road trip.
In the BTCFi space right now, opportunities are popping up more than ever.
Each new opportunity comes with a new decision to make.
When opportunities become abundant, what becomes scarce isn't the opportunity itself.
It's time, attention, and the ability to react.
Perhaps when a system matures enough, the challenge isn't about creating more choices.
It’s about lowering the decision-making costs.
That's why I've been keeping an eye on Bedrock 2.0 lately.
Not because @Bedrock is creating new opportunities.
But because #Bedrock poses a different question:
As opportunities increase, how can users access them without spending too much time deciding among them?
It seems the most mature systems aren't necessarily those that create the most options.
Rather, they are the systems that enable people to make fewer decisions.
If BTCFi continues to expand in the future, will the advantage lie with systems that create more choices, or those that help users access them with fewer decisions?
$BR