The liquidity proof mechanism experiment of Berachain ended in failure. The Infrared protocol controls 35% of the BGT emissions and 87% of the vault operations on the entire chain, making the ecosystem's heavy reliance on a single project quite evident. Worse still, the BERA token has fallen by 92% since its launch, with the TVL plummeting from $2.19 billion to $267 million in just one month. This is the true reflection of how decentralized innovation can go astray – when you try to create an innovative incentive model, you inadvertently create new centralized traps. Single points of failure, concentrated liquidity, and excessive protocol dependency are issues that were once thought to be solvable by Web3, but now reappear in a different form on the new generation of chains.
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Degen4Breakfast
· 12-23 02:14
It's another story of a grand vision being shattered. This wave of Berachain has truly opened my eyes; under the guise of innovation, it still can't escape the curse of centralization.
The TVL has fallen 88%, which is incredible; it evaporated from 2.1 billion to 270 million in just one month. Haven't we learned how to create decentralized solutions in our circle?
Infrared operating 87% of the vaults alone? Isn't this just an old form of centralization in a new shell? Where's the promised Decentralization, brother?
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Deconstructionist
· 12-22 10:56
Infrared is dominating the market, is this "Decentralization"? Laughable, it's just old wine in a new bottle.
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A 92% fall, the TVL collapsed from over 2 billion to 200 million in two months, the cost of this innovation is quite heavy.
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I thought PoL could solve something, but it turned out to just be a new form of re-centralization, unbelievable.
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A single point of failure is renamed as "innovation incentive model", is this how we deceive ourselves in Web3?
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How do we present the Berachain case in slides? It's simply a textbook example of a negative case.
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87% of the vaults are controlled by one protocol, isn't this a nightmare for investors?
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From $2.19B to $267M, it feels like watching fireworks, the kind that hurts.
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0xSherlock
· 12-22 10:56
Berachain is truly a textbook example of a reverse case, wrapped in the name of innovation is a centralized monster...
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BtcDailyResearcher
· 12-22 10:52
Ah... Infrared dominates with 87%, isn't this just a centralized version in disguise?
A 92% fall really can't hold on anymore, Liquidity proof 🤡 still needs more research.
From 2.19B to 267 million, just like that in a month... laughable, is this called innovation?
I don't understand this show called Berachain, but I'm deeply shocked.
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ForkMonger
· 12-22 10:50
lmao infrared basically became the entire chain... that's not decentralization, that's just a liquidity concentration attack waiting to happen. governance efficiency my ass when one protocol controls 87% of the vault mechanics
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RugResistant
· 12-22 10:45
analyzed this thoroughly and ngl... infrared basically became the single point of failure berachain was supposed to avoid lmao. 35% of emissions + 87% vault control = textbook centralization exploit waiting to happen. red flags detected everywhere here
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WhaleWatcher
· 12-22 10:31
This is ridiculous, Infrared has a protocol with 87% vaults, it feels like Berachain originally wanted to innovate but ended up reversing into competition.
The liquidity proof mechanism experiment of Berachain ended in failure. The Infrared protocol controls 35% of the BGT emissions and 87% of the vault operations on the entire chain, making the ecosystem's heavy reliance on a single project quite evident. Worse still, the BERA token has fallen by 92% since its launch, with the TVL plummeting from $2.19 billion to $267 million in just one month. This is the true reflection of how decentralized innovation can go astray – when you try to create an innovative incentive model, you inadvertently create new centralized traps. Single points of failure, concentrated liquidity, and excessive protocol dependency are issues that were once thought to be solvable by Web3, but now reappear in a different form on the new generation of chains.