Comparison of the Five Major Bitcoin Layer 2 Network Solutions: A Comprehensive Analysis of Native Properties, Decentralization, and Practicality

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Comparison and Analysis of Bitcoin Layer 2 Network Solutions

Recently, Bitcoin Layer 2 (BTC Layer2) has become the focus of the crypto market, with various projects emerging. This article will analyze and compare five mainstream BTC L2 solutions in the market from a technical implementation perspective, including Bitcoin sidechains, UTXO + client verification, Taproot Consensus, multi-signature + EVM, and Rollup. We will evaluate the advantages and disadvantages of these solutions from three dimensions: Bitcoin native nature, degree of decentralization, and level of implementation.

Analyzing the five hottest BTC L2 solutions at present, which one has the most Bitcoin native quality and practicality?

1. Bitcoin Sidechain

Bitcoin sidechains are independent scaling blockchains that operate separately from the Bitcoin main chain, typically utilizing mechanisms like multi-signatures or hash locks to manage Bitcoin assets.

  1. Bitcoin's native nature: Poor. Sidechains can exist independently and are difficult to gain broad support from the Bitcoin community.

  2. Degree of decentralization: General. The security of assets mainly relies on multiple signature participants.

  3. Level of implementation: Moderate. Although it has existed for many years, progress in ecological development has been limited, mainly constrained by the level of decentralization and asset security issues.

2. UTXO+ Client Verification

Such solutions are based on the Bitcoin UTXO account model for off-chain ledger calculations and use client-side verification to ensure the authenticity of the ledger.

  1. Bitcoin's native nature: very high. Completely based on the UTXO model, but it may overly emphasize native nature while neglecting feasibility.

  2. Degree of decentralization: Moderate. Although the verification process is decentralized, it is essentially distributed verification rather than network consensus, which may pose security risks.

  3. Degree of Implementation: Relatively low. Major representative projects such as RGB and BitVM are still in theoretical or early development stages, facing significant uncertainty.

3. Taproot Consensus

Taproot Consensus is built on three native technologies of Bitcoin, including Schnorr signatures, MAST contracts, and the Bitcoin light node network.

  1. Bitcoin Native Nature: Very high. Completely based on Bitcoin core technology, without introducing additional technologies.

  2. Degree of decentralization: High. Decentralized asset management is achieved through a BFT consensus network composed of over 1000 Bitcoin light nodes.

  3. Degree of implementation: relatively high. There are already actual operating projects (such as BEVM) that have processed a large number of transactions and attracted a considerable scale of users.

4. Multi-signature + EVM

This scheme locks Bitcoin in a multi-signature address and then generates corresponding tokens on EVM-compatible chains.

  1. Bitcoin's native nature: Low. Essentially, it is a simplified sidechain solution that lacks deep integration with Bitcoin.

  2. Degree of decentralization: Low. Asset security completely relies on designated multi-signature participants.

  3. Level of Implementation: High. The technical threshold is relatively low, easy to achieve, and there are multiple projects on the market that adopt this solution.

5. Rollup

The Rollup technology of Ethereum will be applied to the Bitcoin second layer network, but it faces verification challenges.

  1. Bitcoin Native Nature: Low. Originating from the Ethereum ecosystem, it has a low correlation with Bitcoin's core functions.

  2. Degree of decentralization: moderate. Asset management usually employs multi-signature schemes, and there are still centralization risks in layer two ledger verification.

  3. Degree of implementation: Moderate. The technology is relatively mature, but its application within the Bitcoin ecosystem still faces numerous challenges.

Summary

Various BTC L2 solutions have their pros and cons. Bitcoin sidechains are difficult to gain widespread recognition; multi-signature + EVM solutions are easy to implement but have low decentralization; UTXO + client verification has high native characteristics but is difficult to implement; Rollup solutions draw on Ethereum's experience but need to solve verification issues; Taproot Consensus performs relatively balanced in terms of native characteristics, decentralization, and implementability, and is worth paying attention to.

Choosing the right BTC L2 solution requires weighing multiple factors such as technical feasibility, security, and user acceptance. With the continuous development of technology and market validation, better solutions may emerge in the future.

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DaisyUnicornvip
· 19h ago
Hehe, sidechains are like a disobedient little flower, it's the stubborn BTC developers who don't like it~
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LazyDevMinervip
· 19h ago
Who wrote this? It's too obscure.
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DecentralizeMevip
· 19h ago
What use is high security?
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Rekt_Recoveryvip
· 19h ago
ngl btc sidechains give me the same vibes as my leveraged longs... sounds good until it's not
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GateUser-cff9c776vip
· 19h ago
Talking so much, in the end, it's still copying Ethereum.
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AirdropFatiguevip
· 19h ago
Hehe, at a glance this is an L2 project.
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SignatureVerifiervip
· 20h ago
smh... yet another l2 that needs serious security auditing tbh
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