en

Crypto apps are shutting down as billions move into Bitcoin ETFs and stablecoins

image
rubric logo Finance
like 1

More than 80 crypto projects formally shuttered or began winding down in the first quarter of this year.

RootData’s “dead-project” archive, which tracks closures, bankruptcies, and chronic project inactivity, logged 86 casualties as of March 20. The pullback has spared almost no corner of the ecosystem, sweeping across digital wallets, $NFT marketplaces, decentralized finance (DeFi) protocols, analytics firms, and messaging tools.

Market observers noted that what initially appeared to be a scattered handful of isolated failures has metastasized into a sector-wide reset.

As a result, the industry is facing a broader reckoning over how the industry funds itself and what users are actually willing to support.

A broad-based retreat across the tech stack

A breakdown of shuttered projects showed that the names caught in this wave are prominent enough to underscore the severity of the slowdown.

For context, Magic Eden, the leading $NFT marketplace, recently announced it will sunset its wallet by May 1, urging users to use export and migration tools.

Gemini-owned Nifty Gateway shifted to a withdrawal-only mode in February, while Dmail slated its closure for mid-May after conceding its decentralized email model lacked a sustainable path forward.

Meanwhile, the casualties extend well beyond wallets and $NFT venues. In March, DeFi platform Balancer Labs announced the wind-down of its corporate entity, citing weak revenue and lingering legal exposure from a 2025 exploit.

Additionally, Tally, a governance platform historically favored by major decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs), also signaled a wind-down.

The DNA of these failing businesses tells the story of this cycle. Many were incubated during the 2021–2022 frenzy or the subsequent 2024–2025 rebound. In those eras, user growth was explosive, token emissions subsidized adoption, and capital flowed freely based on the mere promise of cross-chain expansion.

However, as trading volumes cooled and activity consolidated around a handful of dominant venues, the exorbitant costs of maintaining these sprawling platforms became impossible to mask.

For prominent DeFi analyst Ignas, the death knell of these projects confirms that crypto’s “easy money era has ended.” He pointed out that past speculative market booms, from the California Gold Rush to the dot-com bubble, have historically lasted between three and seven years.

According to him, crypto's run, beginning with the initial coin offering (ICO) craze of 2017 and rolling through DeFi summer, the $NFT mania, airdrops, points farming, and memecoin speculation, stretched for roughly eight years.

Against that hackdrop, he concluded that:

“We are already past that, as every easy money model has been discovered, exploited, or arbitraged to max competition.”

This means that the easiest avenues for rapid gains have been thoroughly mined, leaving behind a maturing market that demands deep specialization and durable unit economics from both builders and users.

The wreckage from the first quarter supports this thesis. The projects crumbling today are largely those engineered for an environment that no longer exists: one defined by abundant risk capital, incentive-driven traffic, and the blind assumption that user growth would eventually translate into a viable business.

Flight to quality: capital rotates toward institutional rails

While the current wave of closures suggests the easy money has dried up, capital hasn't abandoned the industry; it has simply changed its target.

Instead, the new liquidity is geared toward entirely different objectives. As Ignas frames it, the frontier has shifted toward integration with traditional finance (TradFi), tokenization, real-world assets (RWAs), permissioned corporate chains, and regulatory compliance.

The data bears this out. US spot Bitcoin ETFs absorbed $1.32 billion in March, marking their first positive month of 2026 after a four-month outflow streak, according to SoSoValue.

Apart from data, CryptoSlate reports that stablecoins are hovering near a staggering $300 billion market capitalization, with several traditional financial institutions, including Fidelity and Western Union, launching new stable products.

Meanwhile, data from RWA.xyz shows the total value of distributed real-world assets at over $26 billion. This emerging sector has also seen an avalanche of traditional institutions like BNP Paribas, BlackRock, and others.

All of these show that the money is undeniably still in the system. However, it is just pooling in venues that look more liquid, more legible, and fundamentally more durable.

This migration dictates who survives. Bitcoin ETFs siphon retail and institutional demand into familiar, heavily regulated portfolio structures. Stablecoins are increasingly entrenched in mundane but massive use cases: payments, settlement, and corporate cash management. Tokenized Treasuries attract capital hunting for yield-bearing instruments within a clear commercial and regulatory framework.

In this austere environment, a generalized consumer wallet or an app reliant on fading $NFT volumes faces a nearly insurmountable burden of proof to justify user attention or venture funding.

Consequently, crypto is rapidly concentrating. Activity that once cascaded across a long tail of speculative projects is now being pulled toward a few dominant rails, established brands, and products that plug directly into balance-sheet finance.

This means the baseline for survival has shifted: a startup can no longer rely solely on cultural relevance within the crypto echo chamber; it increasingly needs recurring users, robust fee income, or a definitive role in the infrastructure that institutions are actively adopting.

Ignas captured it best, saying:

“What’s left to earn requires real infra, real users, real revenue.”