While Ethereum and Solana have spent the last three years scaling their networks to support decentralized finance and fast, cheap transactions, the original cryptocurrency remains stuck.
The financial market tolerates this sluggishness because of Bitcoin’s unmatched liquidity and brand dominance. But capital is impatient, and the same structural limits that created multi-billion-dollar ecosystems like Optimism and Arbitrum on Ethereum are leading projects to build high-performance Layer 2 infrastructure directly on top of Bitcoin.
The demand for a functional Bitcoin scaling solution is massive – and almost entirely unfulfilled. Nobody wants to pay exorbitant base-layer fees or wait ten agonizing minutes for block confirmations to execute a simple decentralized swap.
It has led to one presale protocol absorbing capital at a huge rate, with Bitcoin Hyper grabbing crypto’s attention as a Layer 2 network designed to execute high-speed smart contract transactions backed by Bitcoin. The project’s token, HYPER, has raised $31.8 million in its ongoing public presale. At a current entry price of $0.0136767 and an initial staking APY of 37%, the protocol aims to capture liquidity in Bitcoin wallets worldwide.
How the Bitcoin Hyper Network Operates
Building a viable Layer 2 on Bitcoin is fundamentally harder than building one on Ethereum. Ethereum was explicitly designed with smart contracts in mind, whereas Bitcoin is a rigid, highly secure ledger with strict scripting limitations. Bitcoin Hyper tackles this bottleneck by taking the computational burden away from the primary blockchain.
2026 is all about one thing.
Running Bitcoin on Hyper speed. ⚡️🔥https://t.co/VNG0P4GuDo pic.twitter.com/jJDYGnYZNf
— Bitcoin Hyper (@BTC_Hyper2) March 9, 2026
Instead of forcing every micro-transaction through Bitcoin’s congested mempool, Bitcoin Hyper will process batches of transactions on its own secondary network. These high-volume batches are then rolled up and settled on the main Bitcoin chain, meaning the L2 has the speed and negligible transaction fees of a modern protocol, all while leaning on the immutable cryptographic security of Bitcoin, the world’s most decentralized network.
Security remains the most important aspect for any network bridging assets or scaling Bitcoin, and HYPER’s underlying code has completed full security audits by both Coinsult and SpyWolf – suggesting the protocol is preparing for its launch stage.
A Case for a Breakout Year
The sheer size of the ongoing presale indicates the market is crying out for a Bitcoin Layer 2. For a project to raise $31.8 million before a token lists on a public exchange shows a lot of conviction from the market.
Looking directly at historical precedent, Optimism and Arbitrum did not just add marginal features to the Ethereum ecosystem, but absorbed billions of dollars in daily trading volume – and minted generational wealth for early adopters who recognized the possibilities of scaling. Their native governance tokens reached multi-billion-dollar market capitalizations at the height of the last bull run by solving Ethereum’s gas fee problem. Bitcoin’s transaction fee problem is demonstrably worse during bull markets, yet its total addressable market is exponentially larger.
With well over a trillion dollars in aggregate wealth parked in Bitcoin today, the vast majority of that capital does very little – sitting in cold storage or centralized exchange wallets, generating zero yield and interacting with zero decentralized applications.
If Bitcoin Hyper takes even a small element of that dormant capital onto its Layer 2 network, HYPER will become one of the loudest crypto in the next bull run.
It is a market cap that various crypto analysts have noted, such as Borch Crypto, which highlighted the size of the market opportunity for HYPER.
The current $0.0136767 presale price values the network at a steep discount compared to fully operational Layer 2 networks on rival chains. With a market cap of $32 million, a 10x for HYPER would place it at a $320 million market cap, and 100x gains for HYPER would place it at $3.2 billion, levels which Ethereum L2s have met before – but with a head start in terms of Ethereum’s natural capability for smart contracts, and operating on a Layer 1 which is a third of the size of Bitcoin.
So it might be an ambitious goal, but if HYPER starts attracting the attention of Bitcoin whales – hungry for extra yield and options for their Bitcoin, it starts looking like a reasonable target.
Unlocking Dormant Liquidity
Capital rotation is often ruthless, and as legacy networks reach saturation, liquidity inevitably flows toward the path of least resistance and more potential upside.
Right now, the most lucrative untapped sector in crypto is Bitcoin’s limited utility. Bitcoin Hyper seems very close to launch, and could change the direction of Bitcoin itself. It’s a big prize, and HYPER seems the closest to achieving it.
