Several high-profile crypto ventures announced operational changes this week, spanning layer-2 networks, DeFi protocols, and NFT projects. Arbitrum Nova entered maintenance mode, Bitcoin L2 Botanix signaled a wind-down, Pudgy Party ceased operations, and Aave released a risk framework update, according to the weekly report from WuBlockchain.
The changes are not isolated. They reflect a market in which liquidity and developer resources are migrating toward projects with proven traction, while early-stage experiments face harder funding conditions.
Layer-2 Networks Face Structural Shifts
Arbitrum Nova, the AnyTrust chain designed for gaming and social applications, entered a maintenance period with no public timeline for a return. Offchain Labs has not framed the move as a shutdown, but any extended maintenance raises practical questions for developers whose dapps rely on lower fees. Arbitrum overall remains one of the top blockchains by developer activity , so the Nova maintenance is unlikely to affect the broader Arbitrum One ecosystem.
Meanwhile, Botanix decided to wind down its Bitcoin layer-2 network. The project aimed to bring an EVM-compatible environment to Bitcoin, allowing Solidity-based contracts to settle on the base layer. Its closure adds to the long list of ambitious Bitcoin L2 attempts that have struggled to attract capital and users outside of speculative windows. Bitcoin’s limited native scriptability continues to make such layers dependent on complex bridging, a vulnerability that persists even as ordinals and BRC-20 tokens generate periodic attention.
NFT and Gaming Ventures Retrench
Pudgy Party, a gaming-focused offshoot tied to the Pudgy Penguins brand, ceased operations this week. The project had aimed to translate a recognizable NFT intellectual property into an interactive experience. While the parent brand retains value, the shutdown underscores that even strong IP does not guarantee a sustainable Web3 gaming product. In the same market, $X@AI BRC-20 NFTs and Courtyard outshine in weekly sales rankings, revealing a selectiveness that favors newer inscription-based assets and utility-driven projects over legacy profile-picture collections.
Aave Tightens Risk Guardrails
In DeFi, Aave updated its risk framework, a move typical of protocols that manage billions in user funds. While specific parameter changes were not detailed in the initial summary, such updates often adjust collateral thresholds, borrowing limits, or interest rate models in response to market volatility. For a protocol that sits at the core of decentralized lending on Ethereum and L2s, fine-tuning risk is not dramatic—it is essential. The update signals that the largest DeFi platforms are hardening their defenses, not chasing expansion at any cost.
The week’s developments form a pattern of deliberate contraction. Networks and apps that could not bootstrap enough activity are being wound down or paused, while protocols that already command liquidity are optimizing for survival. For developers and traders, the takeaway is that the market no longer rewards promises alone; it rewards delivery.


