Babylon is on fire, but how to mine? Try the Bedrock uniBTC shortcut

Hey folks, have you felt the heat from the recent Babylon mainnet launch? The Bitcoin re-staking game has been discussed from last year to this year, and it’s finally happening. But here’s the kicker: jumping into Babylon staking has a super high barrier to entry, it’s complicated, and once you stake your BTC, it’s locked up, zero liquidity.

This has led to a situation where many retail traders see the meat on the Babylon stove but can’t take a bite. So what’s the move? I think this is where Bedrock’s liquidity re-staking protocol comes into play.

Bedrock’s uniBTC is specifically designed to tackle this issue. Previously, you would send your BTC directly to Babylon and wouldn’t receive any liquidity receipt. But if you deposit BTC into Bedrock, you get uniBTC in return. This uniBTC not only serves as your proof of earnings in Bedrock, but it’s also an asset that circulates across major DeFi protocols.

Remember the slogan from Bedrock 2.0? “The intelligent yield engine of Bitcoin capital.” Simply put, it acts as your yield distribuitor. You hand over BTC to Bedrock, and it routes those BTC to Babylon, EigenLayer, and even more re-staking protocols in the future to earn base yields. Meanwhile, the uniBTC in your hands can be used on Pendle or Curve for LP (liquidity provision), allowing you to earn some fees as well.

It’s like you could only work one job before, but now Bedrock helps you work three: Babylon points, Bedrock’s own Diamonds, and DeFi LP yields. I saw the uniBTC pool on Pendle hit an APY of over 14% at one point.

With Bedrock 2.0’s “smart routing” strategy, it truly achieves “one fish, multiple bites.” For someone like me who’s a bit lazy, this idiot-proof operation keeps liquidity available for a quick exit, making it super comfortable. This is the biggest upgrade in experience from Bedrock 2.0 compared to the previous generation. @Bedrock #bedroom $BR $BTC