Recently, the entire primary and secondary markets have been under a heavy cloud of pressure, leading many to question the future direction of the BTC Layer 2 market. The answer is not as simple as capital from the East and West avoiding each other. After in-depth research into several representative projects, I have gained a profound understanding.
In my view, the key breakthrough points are as follows: 1) A “new” narrative for asset issuance; 2) Narrowing the “standards” of Layer 2; 3) The advent of BTCFi and the onset of yield-generating activities. Let me elaborate on my thoughts below:
As the BTC ecosystem evolves through developments like Ordinals, BRC20, BitVM, Runes, and Layer 2 solutions, it finds itself in a predicament where the technology is becoming increasingly clear, but the wealth-generation effect is weakening. Why is this happening? The root cause lies in the fact that wealth creation has so far stemmed from the information asymmetry within existing capital, while technological iterations have yet to attract new capital.
Take the flawed BRC20 and the privileged Runes protocol as examples. Despite the widespread criticism of BRC20, it managed to create a wealth effect that drew significant attention to the BTC derivative market. However, the Runes protocol, which seemed promising with its more mature data storage, indexing logic, and mechanics, did not generate the expected market response.
So, does this mean that the direction of technological development is wrong? Is the OP_Return directive to eliminate UTXO spam transactions flawed? Is the premine reservation mechanism poorly designed? Clearly not. The wealth effect triggered by BRC20 inscriptions was a coincidental phenomenon driven by a unique macroeconomic environment and pure information asymmetry. The success of the BTC asset issuance narrative isn’t about “first is first,” but rather about the continuous value empowerment by project teams.
The traditional method of issuing new assets on the BTC main chain, tied to the UTXO model, only benefits those early birds with access to insider information. To create a sustainable narrative for the issuance of BTC derivative assets, two key issues need to be addressed both in the short term and the long term:
Rooch Network, a BTC-native Layer 2 project driven by MoveVM, offers a solution through its Parallel BTC global state synchronization. This allows a BTC inscription asset to be issued at a low cost and circulated initially within a Layer 2 environment. Once the asset has gained sufficient market scale and consensus, it can then be migrated to the BTC mainnet for consensus upgrades. This narrative design, focused on asset circulation, aims to solve the problem of empowering BTC ecosystem projects.
In conclusion, the narrative of asset issuance in the BTC Layer 2 ecosystem is just the beginning. The real inflection point lies in whether these purely community-driven assets can find strong project empowerment on either Layer 1 or Layer 2, and demonstrate significant circulation value within the Layer 2 ecosystem.
Over the past year, the BTC ecosystem has undergone a period of chaotic and rapid growth, where the lack of direction, standards, and entry barriers has led to a flood of builders into the BTC Layer 2 space. We’ve seen a wide variety of approaches, including EVM-compatible solutions, UTXO stack homomorphism, UTXO parallel stacking, BitVM off-chain Turing completeness, native RGB, AVM virtual machines, and more. It’s said that there are already hundreds of BTC Layer 2 projects in the pipeline. However, there’s still no consensus on which direction will ultimately succeed.
Despite this, the BTC Layer 2 market’s “free-for-all” has not significantly contributed to the overall growth of the BTC ecosystem. When the market quiets down, debates resurface about whether BTC Layer 2 is a false narrative. Although the lack of standards has allowed for a “borrow-and-apply” mentality in BTC Layer 2 development, simply stitching mature expansion solutions onto the inherently limited BTC mainnet might not return the expected benefits to the mainnet. Instead, it could pose security and stability risks, potentially harming the BTC mainnet user base.
In my view, the prosperous yet unregulated phase of BTC Layer 2 development is coming to an end, and the next phase will see a shift towards higher technical thresholds:
In summary, adopting higher technical thresholds and narrowing Layer 2 standards will inevitably weed out the “trend-chasers” from the market, allowing more capable developers to expand the Bitcoin ecosystem with the backing of capital. Although this exploration process might be lengthy—akin to Ethereum’s journey from Plasma and Validium to the mainstream Rollups—it will ultimately lead to a more robust and sustainable Layer 2 ecosystem for Bitcoin.
At some point, BTCFi quietly emerged as a focal point in the BTC ecosystem, becoming a hot topic of discussion. Initially, I struggled to understand the distinction between BTCFi and DeFi. Is it simply that DeFi was centered around “decentralization,” while BTCFi focuses on the “BTC public chain”? However, if the goal is to turn the isolated asset with massive community consensus into a catalyst for unlocking liquidity across chains, then even the most advanced high-performance technologies must inevitably yield to the grandfather of all chains, Bitcoin.
Given the unique constraints of Bitcoin’s scripting language and its stateless storage, this reasoning makes sense. Therefore, I believe that the BTCFi concept should encompass three key characteristics:
For instance, GOAT Rollup, built on the zkVM framework, offers “native secure cross-chain” and “unified liquidity layer” features, using the GOAT Stack to provide a robust technical foundation for BTC Layer 2 market expansion. Similarly, Rooch Network, which I mentioned earlier, aims to deliver utility applications for BTC while also providing yield-generating possibilities for BTC assets. The RGB++ layer built on the UTXO structure follows a similar approach, with solutions closely aligned with these three key technical features.
However, before BTCFi fully emerges, I tend to view it more as a direction for ecosystem development. The current stagnant market environment is far from capable of supporting BTCFi to break away from DeFi. Therefore, technical standards should not be the rigid criteria for defining whether a project falls under BTCFi. As long as there is some level of market consensus, it can be included in the BTCFi category. After all, beyond technical methodologies, the most critical aspect is delivering results to the market. Take Blast, for example—it’s not widely recognized as Layer 2 by the mainstream, yet that hasn’t stopped it from making a significant impact on the Layer 2 industry.
Final Note: Although the BTC Layer 2 market is currently chaotic and fragmented, with various challenges in asset issuance, Layer 2 standards, and yield generation, I still see signals of “Keep Optimism.” Whether the inscription market hype will return, whether Layer 2 can achieve the same level of success as Ethereum, or whether BTCFi can bridge the gap between virtual currencies and the real world, the answers lie in the optimism we all share.
Recently, the entire primary and secondary markets have been under a heavy cloud of pressure, leading many to question the future direction of the BTC Layer 2 market. The answer is not as simple as capital from the East and West avoiding each other. After in-depth research into several representative projects, I have gained a profound understanding.
In my view, the key breakthrough points are as follows: 1) A “new” narrative for asset issuance; 2) Narrowing the “standards” of Layer 2; 3) The advent of BTCFi and the onset of yield-generating activities. Let me elaborate on my thoughts below:
As the BTC ecosystem evolves through developments like Ordinals, BRC20, BitVM, Runes, and Layer 2 solutions, it finds itself in a predicament where the technology is becoming increasingly clear, but the wealth-generation effect is weakening. Why is this happening? The root cause lies in the fact that wealth creation has so far stemmed from the information asymmetry within existing capital, while technological iterations have yet to attract new capital.
Take the flawed BRC20 and the privileged Runes protocol as examples. Despite the widespread criticism of BRC20, it managed to create a wealth effect that drew significant attention to the BTC derivative market. However, the Runes protocol, which seemed promising with its more mature data storage, indexing logic, and mechanics, did not generate the expected market response.
So, does this mean that the direction of technological development is wrong? Is the OP_Return directive to eliminate UTXO spam transactions flawed? Is the premine reservation mechanism poorly designed? Clearly not. The wealth effect triggered by BRC20 inscriptions was a coincidental phenomenon driven by a unique macroeconomic environment and pure information asymmetry. The success of the BTC asset issuance narrative isn’t about “first is first,” but rather about the continuous value empowerment by project teams.
The traditional method of issuing new assets on the BTC main chain, tied to the UTXO model, only benefits those early birds with access to insider information. To create a sustainable narrative for the issuance of BTC derivative assets, two key issues need to be addressed both in the short term and the long term:
Rooch Network, a BTC-native Layer 2 project driven by MoveVM, offers a solution through its Parallel BTC global state synchronization. This allows a BTC inscription asset to be issued at a low cost and circulated initially within a Layer 2 environment. Once the asset has gained sufficient market scale and consensus, it can then be migrated to the BTC mainnet for consensus upgrades. This narrative design, focused on asset circulation, aims to solve the problem of empowering BTC ecosystem projects.
In conclusion, the narrative of asset issuance in the BTC Layer 2 ecosystem is just the beginning. The real inflection point lies in whether these purely community-driven assets can find strong project empowerment on either Layer 1 or Layer 2, and demonstrate significant circulation value within the Layer 2 ecosystem.
Over the past year, the BTC ecosystem has undergone a period of chaotic and rapid growth, where the lack of direction, standards, and entry barriers has led to a flood of builders into the BTC Layer 2 space. We’ve seen a wide variety of approaches, including EVM-compatible solutions, UTXO stack homomorphism, UTXO parallel stacking, BitVM off-chain Turing completeness, native RGB, AVM virtual machines, and more. It’s said that there are already hundreds of BTC Layer 2 projects in the pipeline. However, there’s still no consensus on which direction will ultimately succeed.
Despite this, the BTC Layer 2 market’s “free-for-all” has not significantly contributed to the overall growth of the BTC ecosystem. When the market quiets down, debates resurface about whether BTC Layer 2 is a false narrative. Although the lack of standards has allowed for a “borrow-and-apply” mentality in BTC Layer 2 development, simply stitching mature expansion solutions onto the inherently limited BTC mainnet might not return the expected benefits to the mainnet. Instead, it could pose security and stability risks, potentially harming the BTC mainnet user base.
In my view, the prosperous yet unregulated phase of BTC Layer 2 development is coming to an end, and the next phase will see a shift towards higher technical thresholds:
In summary, adopting higher technical thresholds and narrowing Layer 2 standards will inevitably weed out the “trend-chasers” from the market, allowing more capable developers to expand the Bitcoin ecosystem with the backing of capital. Although this exploration process might be lengthy—akin to Ethereum’s journey from Plasma and Validium to the mainstream Rollups—it will ultimately lead to a more robust and sustainable Layer 2 ecosystem for Bitcoin.
At some point, BTCFi quietly emerged as a focal point in the BTC ecosystem, becoming a hot topic of discussion. Initially, I struggled to understand the distinction between BTCFi and DeFi. Is it simply that DeFi was centered around “decentralization,” while BTCFi focuses on the “BTC public chain”? However, if the goal is to turn the isolated asset with massive community consensus into a catalyst for unlocking liquidity across chains, then even the most advanced high-performance technologies must inevitably yield to the grandfather of all chains, Bitcoin.
Given the unique constraints of Bitcoin’s scripting language and its stateless storage, this reasoning makes sense. Therefore, I believe that the BTCFi concept should encompass three key characteristics:
For instance, GOAT Rollup, built on the zkVM framework, offers “native secure cross-chain” and “unified liquidity layer” features, using the GOAT Stack to provide a robust technical foundation for BTC Layer 2 market expansion. Similarly, Rooch Network, which I mentioned earlier, aims to deliver utility applications for BTC while also providing yield-generating possibilities for BTC assets. The RGB++ layer built on the UTXO structure follows a similar approach, with solutions closely aligned with these three key technical features.
However, before BTCFi fully emerges, I tend to view it more as a direction for ecosystem development. The current stagnant market environment is far from capable of supporting BTCFi to break away from DeFi. Therefore, technical standards should not be the rigid criteria for defining whether a project falls under BTCFi. As long as there is some level of market consensus, it can be included in the BTCFi category. After all, beyond technical methodologies, the most critical aspect is delivering results to the market. Take Blast, for example—it’s not widely recognized as Layer 2 by the mainstream, yet that hasn’t stopped it from making a significant impact on the Layer 2 industry.
Final Note: Although the BTC Layer 2 market is currently chaotic and fragmented, with various challenges in asset issuance, Layer 2 standards, and yield generation, I still see signals of “Keep Optimism.” Whether the inscription market hype will return, whether Layer 2 can achieve the same level of success as Ethereum, or whether BTCFi can bridge the gap between virtual currencies and the real world, the answers lie in the optimism we all share.