A viral long-form essay circulating on X is sparking intense debate across the crypto industry, arguing that Bitcoin’s role as the flagship digital asset is structurally weakening — not because of short-term price action, but because the purpose it was engineered to fulfill is now largely complete.
The essay, published by the pseudonymous Pillage Capital, frames Bitcoin not as the “final form of money” but as a highly specific tool: a decentralized battering ram built to force governments to accept digital bearer assets. With regulated tokenized dollars, gold, treasuries and equities now scaling globally, the author argues Bitcoin’s monopoly has evaporated — leaving it competing against regulated, user-friendly rails that better match what consumers actually want.
Pillage Capital’s core claim is that Bitcoin emerged as a direct response to earlier failures of digital money, most notably E-gold. Launched in 1996, E-gold grew to millions of accounts and billions in transactions before being abruptly crushed by U.S. authorities. “Knock on one door, seize one server, indict one human, and it is over,” the author writes.
Bitcoin’s design was the inversion of that attack surface: no CEO, no servers, no headquarters. It was engineered not for efficiency but for survivability.
“Bitcoin was a siege weapon,” the essay argues. “In wartime, a battering ram is priceless. In peacetime, it is a heavy, expensive antique.”
The early Bitcoin movement embraced that adversarial ethos. Onboarding a friend felt like political subversion. Every purchase was framed as a protest against banks, middlemen and gatekeepers. And as regulators pressured fintechs and banks, Bitcoin’s permissionless system grew into the only viable rail for digital value transfer.
Winning the War Destroyed the Trade
According to the essay, Bitcoin’s greatest vulnerability is that it succeeded. With crypto now entrenched in U.S. politics, trillions flowing through stablecoins, and tokenization frameworks gaining regulatory blessing, the need for a censorship-resistant, government-proof rail has diminished.
“What protected Bitcoin wasn’t just decentralization — it was monopoly,” the essay says. “When there is only one working rail, you can confuse the value of the asset with the value of the pipe.”
Now there are many pipes. Stablecoins freely migrate across chains — from Bitcoin to Ethereum to Tron — demonstrating that users care more about the asset and issuer than the blockchain itself. The moment multiple compliant rails existed, Bitcoin’s unique position began to erode.
Per Pillage Capital, banks are preparing to allow USDT transfers, CME is launching onshore perpetuals, and platforms like Coinbase are morphing into hybrid brokerage–banking super-apps with equities, dollars and crypto under one roof. These changes “dissolve the network effects that once protected Bitcoin,” the essay warns.
The UX Problem Never Went Away
The essay delivers a harsh technical critique: Bitcoin — and pure on-chain finance more broadly — never solved usability.
Even as Bitcoin reached nation-state scale, wallets remain unreliable, settlement can stall, and irreversible loss is common. Multimillion-dollar mistakes, frozen smart contracts and lost private keys are still routine.
“The real UX breakthrough wasn’t protocol innovation,” Pillage Capital writes. “It was centralized custodians.”
This, the essay argues, undermines Bitcoin’s ideological premise. If users end up depending on custodians for safety and recovery, the value of a fully trustless network shrinks.
Diminishing Returns and Structural Selling Pressure
The author also claims the “regulatory-risk premium” that once justified holding Bitcoin has collapsed. Over a full cycle, Bitcoin underperformed the Nasdaq. Ethereum’s staking yield — once pitched as a core value driver — is framed as a “straight tax on performance.”
Meanwhile, demographic shifts among early adopters create persistent sell pressure. Many OG holders, now older with families, regularly liquidate for living expenses. Incoming ETF flows, while steady, are small allocations from wealth managers — not aggressive moonshot capital capable of driving the next parabolic rally.
“You took existential regulatory risk and lived with hacks and collapses, and your reward was underperformance,” the essay argues.
Talent Is Leaving for More Exciting Frontiers
Developer activity across crypto ecosystems has dropped to 2017 levels, according to charts cited in the essay. The Bitcoin codebase, by design, is nearly impossible to change. Ambitious engineers, the author says, are drifting into AI, robotics, and aerospace — sectors with fewer ideological constraints and higher growth ceilings.
“If the trade is bad, the UX is worse, and the talent is leaving, the forward path is not hard to see,” Pillage Capital writes.
The Future: Tokenized Real Assets, Not Magic Internet Money
The essay concludes that Bitcoin achieved its original mission by making it politically impossible to ban digital bearer assets forever. But with that battle won, capital is repositioning toward tokenized real-world assets — tokenized gold, tokenized treasuries, tokenized equities — rather than digital assets backed solely by narrative.
Even Tether, once the unofficial “central bank of crypto,” now reportedly holds more gold than Bitcoin.
“Now that the door is open, we can stop worshipping the battering ram,” the author writes.
Whether Bitcoin becomes irrelevant — or simply matures into digital gold with lower volatility and lower returns — remains an open question. But the Pillage Capital essay has clearly hit a nerve, igniting a rare moment of introspection inside a market built on rebellion, risk and reinvention.

