If you look at it from the outside, it seems like a pretty straightforward idea: grab BTC, ETH, and IOTX, throw in some restaking, and merge it all under one roof. Bedrock is really building an ecosystem where assets from different blockchain economies earn additional yield through liquid tokens like uniBTC. At first glance, it appears that the differences between the assets aren’t that significant.
But once you dive deeper, another layer starts to unfold. BTC has historically been viewed as a store of value, ETH has long been the fuel for DeFi, and IOTX is evolving around the infrastructure of devices and machine economies. It’s like trying to create a single transport hub for trucks, trains, and airplanes all at once.
And this layer completely changes the perception of the project. What initially seems like a simple amalgamation of assets actually turns out to be an attempt to operate simultaneously with multiple user behavior models, different yield sources, and separate ecosystems. Gradually, it becomes clear that every action is not just the launch of a new liquid token, but a search for balance between entirely different economic realms.
#bedrock $BR #Bedrock @Bedrock
But once you dive deeper, another layer starts to unfold. BTC has historically been viewed as a store of value, ETH has long been the fuel for DeFi, and IOTX is evolving around the infrastructure of devices and machine economies. It’s like trying to create a single transport hub for trucks, trains, and airplanes all at once.
And this layer completely changes the perception of the project. What initially seems like a simple amalgamation of assets actually turns out to be an attempt to operate simultaneously with multiple user behavior models, different yield sources, and separate ecosystems. Gradually, it becomes clear that every action is not just the launch of a new liquid token, but a search for balance between entirely different economic realms.
#bedrock $BR #Bedrock @Bedrock