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Botanix winds down after questioning long-term demand for Bitcoin L2s

Botanix winds down after questioning long-term demand for Bitcoin L2s

Botanix winds down after questioning long-term demand for Bitcoin L2s

Bitcoin layer-2 project Botanix is shutting down its network after concluding that demand for Bitcoin-native decentralized finance may not be large enough to sustain independent blockchain ecosystems under current market conditions.

In a lengthy post published Tuesday, the team behind Botanix said users should withdraw all Bitcoin and other assets from the network before July 9, 2026, when the federation plans to sweep remaining funds.

The shutdown comes after nearly four years of development and more than a year of live mainnet operations built around Botanix’s Spiderchain architecture.

But unlike many failed crypto projects, Botanix did not blame security failures, technical limitations, or regulatory pressure.

Instead, the team openly questioned whether the broader market for Bitcoin-native DeFi infrastructure truly exists at scale.

“The honest answer we have arrived at… is that it did not work,” the company wrote.

Botanix says the technology worked

The post repeatedly emphasized that the project’s infrastructure performed as intended.

According to Botanix:

The project also secured integrations with companies including Chainlink, GMX, Morpho, Alchemy, Fireblocks, Galaxy, and OKX Wallet.

Botanix additionally launched BINK, a self-custodial Bitcoin neobank featuring email login, Bitcoin-backed borrowing, and Lightning integration across iOS and Android devices.

The team argued the experiment failed economically rather than technically.

Users preferred convenience over Bitcoin-native infrastructure

One of the strongest conclusions in the shutdown notice centered on user behavior across Bitcoin DeFi markets.

Botanix said most users appeared comfortable using wrapped Bitcoin products such as WBTC on Ethereum and mature general-purpose layer-2 ecosystems, rather than migrating to dedicated Bitcoin-native infrastructure.

“Users have voted with their behaviour,” the company wrote.

The team argued decentralization and Bitcoin-native trust assumptions mattered less to users once cheaper and more convenient alternatives became widely available.

That argument also aligns with broader market concentration trends across Bitcoin scaling ecosystems.

Data from DefiLlama shows Bitcoin layer-2 activity remains heavily concentrated around a small number of established platforms.

Stacks accounts for roughly 41% of the sector, and Rootstock controls another 40%. Smaller ecosystems hold only marginal shares of the market.

Source: DefiLlama

The concentration highlights the growing importance of distribution and user ownership across crypto infrastructure markets.

Distribution is replacing infrastructure as crypto’s growth engine

The Botanix post also argued that crypto markets are increasingly consolidating around platforms that directly control user relationships and liquidity flows.

The company specifically pointed to Hyperliquid, Robinhood, centralized exchanges, and large financial platforms as examples of distribution-driven growth models.

“We were, and still are, believers in decentralisation,” the team wrote, “but the current direction of on-chain growth is running through distribution.”

The company also revealed that it had considered launching a token in the future. Still, it ultimately concluded that token incentives alone were no longer producing sustainable product-market fit across the industry.


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