Interesting post. I’m not completely sure what specific risks or concerns you’re trying to solve for here, but this definitely overlaps with some of the same thinking behind what we’ve been building with time-locked Bitcoin gifts. One thing I’ve noticed after 30+ years dealing with families, estates, inheritances, and human behavior is that inheritance planning is rarely just about “who gets the money.” It’s also about timing, discipline, security, simplicity, and reducing the chances of emotional or impulsive decisions destroying long-term wealth. Smart Contract Giving, powered by bc1q21.com, isn’t really an inheritance platform specifically, but it can be used for legacy and inheritance-style planning. For example, someone could create Bitcoin gifts that release yearly, every 5 years, at certain ages, or over long periods of time — all enforced directly by the Bitcoin blockchain itself. The interesting part is that the funds are not held by a company or custodian. The time-lock exists on Bitcoin itself. The beneficiary simply needs the seed words when the appropriate time comes. I’d actually be curious to hear more about the exact problem you’re trying to solve here, because I suspect there’s a lot of overlap between your thinking and what time-locked Bitcoin tools are evolving toward. Bitcoin time-locked giving. Not custody. Not a wallet. A tool for sending Bitcoin into the future. Smart Contract Giving powered by bc1q21 https://bc1q21.com