I've held tokens that promised utility before.

Most delivered rewards.

BR inside Bedrock 2.0 is being designed for something structurally different.

Not yield. Access.

Last week I was looking at roughly 2,400 BR and asking myself a question I hadn't seriously considered: what does this tier actually unlock when the first vault opens?

That question changed how I think about the token entirely.

For most of my time in crypto, reward tokens had one job.

Earn them. Hold them. Maybe sell them.

A byproduct of using a protocol. Not a reason to use it.

The tier system in Bedrock 2.0 changes that.

Higher tiers unlock priority entry into institutional vaults before they open to everyone. Boosted yields. Deeper access inside BRclaw — the AI On-Chain Analyst that models risk and strategy trade-offs so you don't have to figure it out alone.

Here's what I keep coming back to.

The Modular Vault Framework has capacity-limited strategies. The Alpha — Selini Vault is one of them. When it fills, it fills. Late movers don't get a second window.

That's not artificial scarcity.

That's just how institutional strategies work.

I'm not completely sure how the supply mechanics play out in practice. These things rarely move exactly as designed. But the direction is clear — more capital into uniBTC vaults means more demand for $BR and less circulating supply. The token's value ties directly to protocol growth.

That's rare in BTCfi.

Whether it executes cleanly is still an open question for me. But a token functioning as both yield multiplier and vault access key inside an Intelligent Yield Engine feels worth understanding before rollouts begin.

Full picture here: https://www.bedrock.technology/

If vault capacity is genuinely limited, how are you thinking about your tier position before the first allocation windows open?

@Bedrock #Bedrock $BR