2026 Q1 crypto projects hit a wave of closures: Bitcoin ETFs and stablecoins guide capital flows to top-tier platforms

Gate News update: In the first quarter of 2026, the cryptocurrency industry saw a large-scale wave of major project shutdowns. More than 80 projects officially stopped operating, covering digital wallets, NFT marketplaces, DeFi protocols, analytics tools, and instant messaging applications. RootData’s “dead projects” archive shows that, as of March 20, 86 projects had already shut down, reflecting the market’s digestion and liquidation of easy-profit models.

Nifty Gateway has switched to supporting only withdrawals; Dmail plans to shut down in mid-May; and DeFi platform Balancer Labs has announced an end to operations due to weak revenue and legal risks stemming from a 2025 vulnerability. The long-running governance platform Tally will also end its service. Most of these projects originated from the 2021–2022 crypto boom or the 2024–2025 market rebound period, relying on a fast-expansion model driven by token issuance and capital. With current trading volumes declining and the market becoming more centralized, their business models are no longer sustainable.

Noted DeFi analyst Ignas said this marks the end of the “easy money era” in crypto. The market is shifting toward maturation, and developers and users need highly specialized and sustainable economic models. Funds are concentrating toward institutional channels and solid products. In March alone, the U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF attracted $1.32 billion in inflows, achieving the first quarterly net growth since 2026. Stablecoin market capitalization is nearing $300 billion. Multiple traditional financial institutions are involved, while the total value of distributed real-world assets (RWA) has already exceeded $26 billion, attracting institutional investment.

This capital migration highlights a shift in the survival baseline: projects that rely on NFT trading volume or cultural influence face greater challenges, while products that can provide a stable user base, meaningful revenue, or direct access to institutional balance sheets are more competitive. Ignas concluded: “To succeed, you need real infrastructure, real users, and real revenue.” The crypto industry’s focus is rapidly concentrating on a small number of dominant platforms and established brands, and opportunities for speculative projects are disappearing.

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