If it's a stablecoin launched and stored using the Bitcoin blockchain through Runes protocol, then that's absolutely better.
I would personally prefer to have all that off-chain and let those who want to play with Runes, Ordinals, and any other future projects there. But that's not going to happen.
That would actually be preferable, but that's another discussion for another topic. The point of why I made this topic is that it might show everyone the good possibilities of Runes, and that it's not just for memecoins with very stupid tickers.
Plus the Runes protocol is better than BRC-20 because Runes is UTXO-based. It doesn't bloat the state as much as BRC-20.
I can see an advantage in a stablecoin native to the Bitcoin blockchain if it offers something more than what we already have on alternative chains. If it's just the same old, same old under a slightly different name and logo, why bother. A Bitcoin-native stablecoin that is censorship-resistant and can't be frozen in your address would be a positive change. We only have DAI with such a feature, but unless what I read a couple of days ago is wrong, DAI will rebrand and become a centralized stablecoin that can be locked by its issuer.
Why bother? Because it's built in the Bitcoin blockchain, not in those scam blockchains like Ethereum.