Legend, a consumer-focused DeFi mobile app supported by investors including Coinbase Ventures and a16z crypto, is preparing to shut down after operating for roughly two years. The platform will officially go offline on July 12.
In a farewell message, founder Jayson Hobby shared a broader takeaway from the company’s experience: mainstream consumers are not drawn to blockchain technology itself. Instead, they care about practical benefits such as stronger returns, smoother payments, and greater financial flexibility.
A Different View of Consumer Crypto
Hobby argued that successful crypto products will likely be those that minimize the visibility of blockchain infrastructure rather than promote it as a headline feature.
For years, many DeFi applications marketed their “on-chain” nature as a major advantage. According to Hobby, that approach may not resonate with everyday users, who tend to prioritize convenience and outcomes over the underlying technology stack.
Funding and Product Vision
Legend secured $15 million in seed financing in early 2025, with the round led by Andreessen Horowitz’s crypto division and participation from Coinbase Ventures.
🧭Decentralized finance platform Legend raises $15 million from a16z and Coinbasehttps://t.co/4y7c6izGUx
— Legend (@legendapp) February 11, 2025
The app, created by former Coinbase and Compound Finance executive Jayson Hobby, aimed to simplify decentralized finance through a mobile-first experience. Users could access yield opportunities, token swaps, borrowing tools, and leveraged strategies with minimal friction.
Although the product reportedly attracted engaged users, the company ultimately struggled to achieve the scale necessary to sustain operations.
Legend did not publicly release figures related to user activity, downloads, or transaction volume. Because the platform operated as a non-custodial service, it also did not maintain its own total value locked (TVL).
Part of a Larger Trend
The shutdown reflects a wider pattern seen across consumer crypto startups in 2025 and 2026: well-funded applications that prove there is interest in crypto-powered financial tools yet fail to build mass-market distribution.
Legend says users will continue to have access to the app until July 12 and will receive ongoing reminders to withdraw their assets before the service ends. Company documentation is expected to remain available for an additional 60 days after closure.
Hobby’s final message suggests that the next breakout crypto product may succeed not by emphasizing blockchain but by making it almost invisible to the end user.
