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Covenant AI Leaves Bittensor and the Ecosystem Takes a Hit: TAO Drops 18% And Subnets Drop More

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Covenant AI, the team behind Subnet 3 (Templar), Subnet 81 (Grail), and Subnet 39 (Basilica), has announced its exit from Bittensor. The announcement hit immediately. TAO dropped 18% within hours. Subnet tokens fell faster and further than TAO.

TAO dropped 18% within a few hours of the news. Grail fell 68%, Basilica dropped 61.7%, Templar lost 57.5%, Minotaur was down 34%, NexisGen AI fell 29%, and TrajectoryRL dropped 26.8%. The declines were fast, broad, and reflected how much weight a single team’s presence carried across the Bittensor ecosystem.

Who Covenant AI Was in Bittensor

Covenant AI was not a peripheral participant in the Bittensor network. The team operated three subnets simultaneously: SN3, SN81, and SN39. Running one active subnet in Bittensor requires meaningful technical commitment and ongoing validator and miner coordination. 

Running three puts a team among the most operationally significant contributors in the ecosystem. Their departure removes that operational presence from three distinct parts of the network at once, which is why the market reaction was as broad as it was severe.

The subnet token prices visible in the image tell the story clearly. Grail (SN81) at $2.75 down 68% and Basilica (SN39) at $2.32 down 61.7% took the largest hits as the two subnets most directly associated with Covenant AI’s exit beyond their primary SN3 operation. 

Templar (SN3) at $9.61 down 57.5% followed closely. These are not minor corrections. They are near-collapse-level drops within a single trading session.

Why Subnet Tokens React This Sharply to Team Exits

Subnet tokens in Bittensor derive their value from the active development, validator participation, and ongoing research output of the teams building and maintaining those subnets. 

Unlike layer 1 tokens where value is distributed across a broad ecosystem of contributors, subnet tokens are often tightly coupled to the specific team running them. When that team leaves, the question the market is immediately asking is whether the subnet continues to function, whether validators stay, and whether the research and development that gave the subnet its value proposition continues under new leadership or dissolves.

That uncertainty gets priced in immediately and aggressively. A 68% drop on Grail and a 62% drop on Basilica within hours reflects the market’s answer to those questions, at least in the short term. The market is not waiting for clarity. It is pricing the worst-case scenario until evidence of continuity or replacement emerges.

The Bigger Effect on Unrelated Subnets

The drops on Minotaur (SN112, down 34%), NexisGen AI (SN70, down 29%), and TrajectoryRL (SN11, down 26.8%) are the affected part of the story. These subnets have no direct connection to Covenant AI. They still dropped hard in the same session. 

When a significant team exits a network publicly and abruptly, everyone holding anything in that ecosystem starts asking the same question: who else might leave? That uncertainty gets sold first and investigated later.

Conclusion

Covenant AI’s exit pulled one of Bittensor’s most operationally significant teams out in a single announcement. Three subnets lost between 57% and 68% of their value in hours. Unrelated subnets got caught in the same wave.

TAO’s 18% drop reflects how seriously the market weighted Covenant’s presence. Whether the affected subnets find continuity under new contributors or remain distressed depends on what comes next from the Bittensor ecosystem’s response.

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