Bitcoin started as a pure peer-to-peer system—simple, elegant, stripped of intermediaries. Fast forward to today, and the narrative's getting complicated. DeFi integration has opened doors, sure, but accessing old holdings? That's become a puzzle. Legacy wallet compatibility issues, bridge constraints, liquidity fragmentation across chains—these aren't small friction points anymore. The question isn't whether Bitcoin belongs in DeFi anymore; it's how we solve the real operational headaches. Where does BTC head next in this ecosystem? That's what actually matters.
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Bitcoin started as a pure peer-to-peer system—simple, elegant, stripped of intermediaries. Fast forward to today, and the narrative's getting complicated. DeFi integration has opened doors, sure, but accessing old holdings? That's become a puzzle. Legacy wallet compatibility issues, bridge constraints, liquidity fragmentation across chains—these aren't small friction points anymore. The question isn't whether Bitcoin belongs in DeFi anymore; it's how we solve the real operational headaches. Where does BTC head next in this ecosystem? That's what actually matters.