Entropy, a startup that tried to build a safer way to hold and move crypto, is shutting down and sending most money back to investors.
The company’s leader said the business could not reach the size investors wanted. Reports say the team will return roughly $25–$27 million that had been put into the project.
What Happened To Entropy
According to reports, Entropy began with tools for decentralized custody aimed at big holders who wanted more control.
Over time the group changed course and tried to build automation features that would make crypto workflows easier.
The company raised capital from well-known backers, including Andreessen Horowitz and Coinbase Ventures. It ran for about four years and weathered two rounds of layoffs as the team tested different ideas.
In a Saturday post on X, Entropy founder and CEO Tux Pacific said the crypto automation platform has reached the end of the road after years of trying to find a workable future.
I am winding-up Entropy.
After four years, several pivots, and two rounds of layoffs, I’ve decided to wind-up Entropy and return capital to our investors.
For the latter half of 2025, the Entropy team was hard at work on a crypto automations platform (basically n8n/zapier/etc…
— tux pacific (@__tux) January 24, 2026
Decision To Return Capital
Two clear facts pushed the move. First, buyers and customers did not grow fast enough for the kind of return venture backers expect.
Second, the team struggled to find a steady, repeatable business model that could support rapid growth and hire plans.
Leaders tried product tweaks and new directions, but the pace of change stayed slow and revenue did not climb as hoped. In some cases the product was kept alive by small wins; in others it felt stalled.
Investors will get back most of the money they put in. That makes this shutdown cleaner than some collapses where user funds were at risk.
Reports say refunds will be handled through formal steps and planners are working out the details.
The company’s founder has suggested they may shift their career focus away from crypto, possibly into fields like medical research, though that path is not certain.
Featured image from Pexels, chart from TradingView
Editorial Process for bitcoinist is centered on delivering thoroughly researched, accurate, and unbiased content. We uphold strict sourcing standards, and each page undergoes diligent review by our team of top technology experts and seasoned editors. This process ensures the integrity, relevance, and value of our content for our readers.












