Syndicate Labs, a crypto infrastructure project that helped developers build on-chain communities, investment clubs, and rollup-based apps, said it is winding down after five years as the market shifted away from its core business.
The rollup infrastructure business no longer fit a market increasingly split between broad platform providers and bespoke chain development, according to a tweet from the company on Wednesday.
Rollups are networks that process transactions off a base blockchain before posting the results back to it. Launches for such platforms have slowed while existing networks continue to shut down, leaving less room for the reusable infrastructure Syndicate had built, it said.
Syndicate co-founder Will Papper said they considered moving into rollup-as-a-service consulting, but decided demand had shifted toward custom execution environments built for specific apps.
That left the company in a narrow middle ground, Papper wrote: too specialized to serve as general infrastructure, and too removed from the execution layer to be rebuilt around custom app chains.
“I wish we had a better path to customer and market traction. Unfortunately, we did not in this rollup market,” Papper said.
The company said it chose an orderly wind-down to meet customer commitments and release its work for others to use on the Syndicate Network.
Syndicate’s shutdown “shows that the rollup infrastructure market has consolidated around a few dominant Layer-2 networks like Base and Arbitrum, which now absorb most of the users and liquidity,” Ryan Yoon, senior analyst at Tiger Research, told Decrypt.
The move also points to “a clear shift where projects prefer subnets or existing infrastructure over building new L2s,” he added.
Crypto cuts and closures
The shutdown adds to a broader retrenchment across crypto and the wider tech sector this year, where weaker demand, tighter funding, and product pivots have forced companies to close or scale back parts of their business.
Gemini-owned NFT marketplace Nifty Gateway said in January it would close, while DeFi lender ZeroLend said the following month it would wind down after three years, citing operational challenges and an unsustainable business model.
Step Finance, SolanaFloor, and Remora Markets also said in February they would shut down weeks after a $29 million hack. Magic Eden later moved its multi-chain wallet into export-only mode as it shifted away from earlier product lines.
Closures have also landed alongside a broader reset across crypto and tech, where companies are cutting staff while shifting resources toward AI and institutional products.
Last month, Meta planned to lay off about 8,000 employees as it increased AI spending.
Earlier this month, Coinbase said it would cut roughly 14% of its workforce amid weaker market conditions and broader AI adoption. Dune Analytics later said it would cut 25% of its staff as it refocused on AI tooling and institutional crypto adoption.
The rise of artificial intelligence as a sector has added another layer to the broader pullback in the tech sector, as firms rethink staffing and product development around automation.
In March, creative software maker Adobe said its CEO Shantanu Narayen plans to step down as the company faces pressure from generative AI tools that threaten parts of its business.
The shift points to a broader restructuring across tech, where companies are moving toward smaller teams and cutting roles tied to older workflows, Decrypt was told at the time.
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