No kidding. Crypto is deeply unpopular with a significant portion of the public - myself included. This is not the same as the early era of smartphones where you either had one or didn't really know much about them (i.e. were neutral). Many people have made up their minds on the utility (or lack thereof) of crypto and want nothing to do with it. Some of the recent incidents of backlash around NFTs in games come to mind.
It doesn't even make sense in many cases. Bitcoin for example will never be useful as a medium of general exchange, the transaction volume is way too low to support it. Plus its deflationary nature makes it at odds with a healthy economy, where you want gradual inflation to at least exceed the birthrate so there is a hope of lifting people out of poverty.
The workaround is to put everything on exchanges, but then you've lost the decentralized nature of Bitcoin and you are back to just a central database owned by a company, AKA a bank.
More centralized digital currencies with regulations backed by central banks have a pretty big potential to disrupt basic banking services. Most problems of cryptocurrencies can be solved with a trusted third party. The question is only how long banks can lobby against that.