A fresh wave of Shiba Inu holders is shifting toward Layer Brett ($LBRETT), pushing analysts to question SHIB’s staying power as meme-coin dynamics evolve. Frustration with stagnant returns and a hunger for projects that pair utility, decentralization and high yield has driven a move toward the Layer 2 newcomer, which is now being compared directly with SHIB, Pepe, Dogecoin, Brett (original) and Bonk.
Layer Brett’s presale — priced at $0.004 per token — has already raised more than $150,000. The offering allocates 30% of a 10 billion max supply to presale buyers, giving $LBRETT a fully diluted valuation (FDV) of roughly $40 million and signaling significant upside potential versus multi-billion-dollar meme caps like SHIB.
Tokenomics and governance lean into self-custody and decentralization: $LBRETT touts no KYC requirements and promises users full control of their keys. Its staking program is a headline-grabber, advertising variable APYs starting around 20,000% for early participants, with auto-compounding mechanics and instant claimability once the presale closes. Those yield features position Layer Brett as a rival to reward-focused crypto communities and DeFi staking pools.
Technically, Layer Brett differentiates itself as an Ethereum Layer 2 solution, emphasizing ultra-low gas fees, near-instant transactions and improved usability over Ethereum L1 and legacy meme chains — a selling point for traders tired of high gas on ETH transfers. The project also supports purchases and staking with ETH, USDT or BNB, widening on-ramp options for retail and DeFi users.
Experts caution that high APYs and presale valuations carry execution and market risks, and that long-term staying power will depend on real utility, decentralization in practice, and token distribution. For now, Layer Brett’s early traction highlights how the meme-coin landscape is increasingly shaped by Layer 2 scaling, yield-seeking behavior and community-led tokenomics.