More than 60 crypto projects have shut down in 2026's first half. That's not a typo. According to RootData's 2026 Crypto Dead Projects List, these crypto projects shut down in 2026 at a pace that shocked even seasoned investors. Ten of them had raised over $10 million each. The three biggest failures all shared one thing in common — the same famous backer.
Bitcoin dropped roughly 23% in Q1 2026. That hit hard.
Projects that raised big money during the 2021–2022 bull run were suddenly out of options. They couldn't raise follow-on capital. They couldn't grow fast enough. Many just quietly closed their doors. At least 20 funded blockchain projects shut down in Q1 alone.
Three of the biggest shutdowns were all backed by a16z (Andreessen Horowitz), one of Silicon Valley's most respected crypto venture firms. Together, Yupp, Syndicate Labs, and Entropy raised a combined $87 million before shutting down.
These weren't tiny experiments. They had real teams, real products, and real money. Yet none of them made it.
Yupp was AI driven platform designed for on-chain content incentives. It raised $33 million in a seed round led by a16z's Chris Dixon — one of crypto's most respected names.
The numbers looked good at first. Yupp attracted 1.3 million users. But users alone don't pay the bills.
Yupp couldn't find a sustainable product-market fit — meaning it never discovered what customers would consistently pay for. By early April 2026, the project announced its closure. The lesson is blunt: user growth without revenue is just a vanity metric.
Syndicate Labs built on-chain developer tools for DAOs (Decentralized Autonomous Organizations — basically internet-native companies governed by token votes) and Ethereum investment clubs.
It raised $27.8 million, including a $20 million Series A back in 2021. That was the peak of DAO hype.
The problem? The market never grew the way it expected. DAO tooling turned out to be a much smaller niche than 2021's optimism suggested. By May 21, 2026, the team announced the shutdown of Syndicate Labs. The company cited a fundamental market shift — the demand just wasn't there.
Entropy was a decentralized custody service. In simple terms, it helped users secure their cryptocurrencies without relying on a central company like Coinbase.
It raised $26.95 million in a 2022 seed round, also backed by a16z. It tried several strategic pivots. Nothing clicked. Unable to scale or attract fresh investment, Entropy announced its closure in January 2026.
Here's the twist: Entropy returned its remaining capital to investors. That's rare. Most struggling startups burn through everything first. It was an honourable exit — but still an exit.
Not necessarily.
Even the best investors in the world can't predict every market shift. a16z has backed hundreds of crypto projects. Some will fail. What's notable here isn't the backing — it's the pattern. All three projects rose in a high-hype cycle and then ran out of road when the market turned.
VC-backed startups in cryptocurrencies face a unique challenge. Token listing delays, high operating costs, and shrinking user attention can compress a $25 million runway into months, not years.
What Should Investors Learn From These Shutdowns?
Here's what this wave of failures actually tells you:
Funding isn't validation. $33M didn't save Yupp. Big checks don't equal big futures.
Users aren't customers. 1.3 million signups mean nothing without a revenue model.
Market size matters. Syndicate was built for a market that was smaller than projected.
Pivots have limits. Entropy tried multiple directions. None worked. Pivoting isn't a strategy on its own.
Timing is everything. Raising in a bull crypto market creates a runway problem when conditions shift.
RootData's list covers only announced closures. Insiders believe the real number of abandoned or "zombie" protocols is meaningfully higher.
No. This is painful, but it's part of growing up.
The 2018 ICO bust led to DeFi. The 2022 crash brought institutions in. This 2026 clean-up may force crypto builders to prioritise real revenue over token speculation. The projects that survive this year will likely be leaner, more focused, and harder to kill.
Crypto isn't dying. It's filtering.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk, including the total loss of capital. Always do your own research before making any investment decision. Past funding or VC backing does not guarantee future performance or project survival.