@Bedrock
I keep coming back to Bedrock because it shows where liquid restaking is actually headed: not just higher yield, but more flexible capital that still feels usable. What stands out to me is the multi-asset angle. Most people talk about ETH first, but Bedrock pushing uniBTC, uniETH, and other asset routes tells me the real race is about who can make idle capital move without making users feel trapped.
The part I find important is the behavior it encourages. When a token keeps liquidity while the underlying position keeps working, people start thinking differently. They are less likely to sit and hold, and more likely to rotate into DeFi, stack incentives, or stay engaged because the asset is still doing something. That is a stronger user loop than simple staking. Bedrock’s non-custodial setup matters here too, because trust assumptions stay lighter than in more locked systems.
Still, the hard part is sustainability. Multi-layer yield sounds great until liquidity fragments or incentives fade. That is the real test for Bedrock and for liquid restaking overall. Can these systems keep users active once the easy rewards normalize?
