#bedrock $BR The longer I spend exploring BTCFi, the more I realize that the biggest challenge is not earning yield.

It's protecting what you already have.

Most people notice rewards.

Very few notice risk until something goes wrong.

I have learned that lesson more than once in crypto.

A promising opportunity can look great on the surface, but every new layer of utility often introduces new assumptions, new dependencies, and new points where things can break.

That is why I have started paying closer attention to infrastructure rather than incentives.

While researching Bedrock, what stood out to me was not simply the potential to make Bitcoin more productive.

It was the apparent focus on reducing hidden risks before they become visible problems.

That matters.

As Bitcoin evolves from an asset that simply sits in a wallet to one that actively participates across multiple ecosystems, the stakes become much higher.

The conversation often revolves around how much Bitcoin can earn.

But a question that feels even more important is this

How is that value protected as more capital flows through increasingly complex systems

Because trust is easy to overlook when everything is working.

Its importance only becomes obvious when something fails.

The future of BTCFi will not be shaped by yield alone.

It will be shaped by the strength of the foundations supporting that yield.

The projects that stand the test of time may not be the ones offering the highest rewards.

They may be the ones building systems that people can rely on when markets become uncertain and conditions become difficult.

In the end, security is not just another feature.

It is the foundation that makes everything else possible.

It is infrastructure.

@Bedrock