The crypto industry has entered one of its sharpest cleanups since the last bear market, with RootData tracking 70 crypto projects that have shut down, filed for bankruptcy, announced closures, or become inactive during the first half of 2026.

The list cuts across DeFi, NFTs, blockchain gaming, Layer 2 networks, wallets, infrastructure, media and DAO tooling. It includes projects such as Loopring, Goldfinch, NFTfi, Nifty Gateway, Foundation, ZeroLend, Ionic, Rage Trade, Botanix, Over Protocol, Zero Network, Leap Wallet, Dmail, Step Finance, MilkyWay, Fantasy Top and Parsec.

The number should not be read as 70 formal insolvency filings. RootData’s category is broader. It includes projects that announced a shutdown, projects that entered bankruptcy, and projects whose websites remained unavailable for long enough to be treated as inactive. That distinction matters, but the underlying trend is clear: crypto startups are running out of room to survive on narrative, token incentives and venture capital alone.

Venture Funding No Longer Guarantees Survival

The most striking part of the 2026 shutdown wave is that several failed projects were not underfunded experiments. Yupp, Syndicate Labs and Entropy collectively raised about $87 million from a16z-linked funding rounds before shutting down, according to reports based on RootData’s list.

Yupp raised $33 million and reportedly attracted nearly 1.3 million users, but user growth did not translate into sustainable revenue. Syndicate Labs raised $27.8 million to build DAO infrastructure, only to face weaker demand for DAO tooling as the sector lost momentum. Entropy, a decentralized custody startup, raised nearly $27 million but failed to reach product-market fit and closed earlier this year.

The failures come despite a wider venture capital backdrop in which crypto funding has not disappeared. FinanceFeeds previously reported that Digital Asset targeted a $2 billion valuation in a funding round led by a16z, while Andreessen Horowitz was seeking a fifth crypto fund. The issue is no longer whether capital exists. It is whether that capital still wants to finance projects without revenue, retention, or clear product-market fit.

Shutdowns Spread Across DeFi, NFTs, Gaming And Infrastructure

The failures are not concentrated in one narrow corner of the market. NFT platforms have struggled with declining trading activity. DeFi protocols have faced lower total value locked, weaker fee generation and reduced token incentives. DAO tooling companies have been hit by weaker demand for governance infrastructure. Blockchain gaming projects have struggled to convert users into sustainable revenue.

Recent shutdowns tracked by FinanceFeeds show the same pattern. Strobe Finance shut down after falling TVL and weak funding conditions. Fishing Frenzy closed after failing to find product-market fit in Web3 gaming. Sophon shut down its own Layer 2 and moved to Base, citing the cost of maintaining separate infrastructure.

Other cases point to the same pressure. Satori Finance shut down despite $13.4 billion in perpetuals volume, showing that headline usage figures do not always produce a viable business. Botanix shut down its Bitcoin Layer 2 after concluding that user demand and fee revenue were not enough to sustain the network.

Bitcoin ETFs Are Absorbing Capital While Smaller Projects Struggle

The shutdown wave also reflects a shift in where crypto capital is going. The sector has not lost investor interest entirely. Instead, capital has moved toward Bitcoin, large-cap tokens, ETFs and regulated market infrastructure, leaving smaller startups fighting for liquidity and attention.

FinanceFeeds reported that spot crypto ETFs returned to inflows in early July, led by Bitcoin products. That type of flow supports the largest assets and regulated wrappers, but it does little for smaller DeFi, NFT, gaming, wallet or infrastructure projects that need active users, protocol fees and fresh venture funding to survive.

The result is a two-speed market. Bitcoin and institutional crypto products can attract capital even during volatile periods, while smaller projects are being forced to prove they have real revenue. Projects that relied on token rewards, speculative user activity, governance participation, NFT trading or grant funding have become more vulnerable.

Revenue, Not Users, Has Become The Survival Metric

The key lesson from the 2026 failures is that user numbers alone are no longer enough. Several projects that attracted communities, transaction activity, or venture backing still failed because they could not convert usage into revenue.

That is a major change from the previous cycle, when protocols could raise capital on the basis of total value locked, token distribution, Discord activity, or a large address count. In 2026, investors are asking harder questions: who pays, how often, what is the gross margin, how much runway remains, and can the product survive without token subsidies?

This is why the current wave is different from the 2022 collapse. The failures of FTX, Celsius, BlockFi and Voyager were tied to leverage, fraud allegations, balance-sheet failures and centralized lending risk. The 2026 shutdowns are more often ordinary business failures. The products may not be scams. They may simply be too expensive to maintain, too small to monetize, or too early for the market they were trying to create.

The Cleanup Could Strengthen The Survivors

The shutdown of more than 70 projects is a negative signal for startup founders, token holders and early investors, but it may also mark a more disciplined phase for the industry. A market that rewards every new token, every Layer 2 and every NFT platform equally is unlikely to allocate capital efficiently.

The next group of survivors will likely look different. They will need recurring revenue, defensible users, lower infrastructure costs, clearer regulatory positioning and fewer assumptions about token appreciation. In DeFi, that means protocols that can generate fees without unsustainable incentives. In gaming, it means products that can work as games before they work as token economies. In infrastructure, it means tools that other teams are willing to pay for, not just integrate for free.

The first half of 2026 has therefore become a stress test for the entire crypto startup model. Venture capital is still present, Bitcoin remains liquid, and institutional products continue to attract flows. But the tolerance for projects without clear revenue has collapsed.

For investors, the message is simple: funding history is not a moat. User growth is not a business model. A token is not a revenue stream. The crypto projects that survive the 2026 cleanup will be those that can prove they are more than a market-cycle trade.