[Twitter threads] Why does expanding L1 capacity make L2 more valuable?

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Chainfeeds Summary:

The future structure will be: a powerful L1 layer plus a ring of highly customized L2 ecosystems.

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https://x.com/Etherealize_io/status/2032091862513684661

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Etherealize


Opinion:

Etherealize: Following the London Hard Fork in August 2021, Ethereum's gas cap was set at 30 million. This figure remained unchanged for over three years. The reason was a core trade-off: if there is too much on-chain computation, validators will require more powerful hardware, concentrating the network in the hands of a few and weakening decentralization. Many competing chains chose to ignore this problem. High-performance chains proved that there is a huge market demand for low-fee, fast L1 transactions. Ethereum's response was a cultural shift: from long-term research to short-term execution. The results are already beginning to show: the gas cap will increase from 30 million to 60 million by 2025; Pectra Upgrade and Fusaka Upgrade have increased blob capacity; and numerous optimizations have been made at the protocol layer. The Ethereum Foundation has also proposed an aggressive roadmap: L1 throughput will increase by approximately 3 times annually over the next few years. Currently, all L1 transactions require each node to re-execute all transactions. zkEVM, however, can compress verification into a fixed-size cryptographic proof. When combined with Data Availability Sampling, validators can verify blocks without downloading all the data. This means that Ethereum could achieve throughput close to that of a high-performance chain while maintaining decentralization. This progress was about five years ahead of many people's expectations. So much so that Ben Edgington, a key figure in Ethereum's PoS transition, even announced his retirement to rejoin development. Justin Drake proposed three goals. The roadmap also includes post-quantum cryptography and native privacy features. If L1 is scaling, what's the point of L2? The answer is customization. L2 has found a strong demand: institutions want Ethereum's security and liquidity while maintaining control of the chain. But this is precisely the source of the Stage 2 dilemma. If L2 reaches Stage 2, it must relinquish the ability to upgrade bridge contracts at any time. This is a limitation for institutions that need compliance adjustments and urgent vulnerability fixes. So the reality is: L2 forms a spectrum of decentralization. Vitalik also acknowledges this. Some L2s will pursue complete decentralization. Others will maintain a higher degree of control. Both are reasonable models, provided the trade-offs are explained honestly.

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https://chainfeeds.substack.com

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Disclaimer: The content above is only the author's opinion which does not represent any position of Followin, and is not intended as, and shall not be understood or construed as, investment advice from Followin.
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