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L1 Regression, L2 Forced to Transform: What Does Ethereum Native Scalability Really Mean
Ethereum Layer 1 Advancement Pushes L2 Toward Specialization
Vitalik’s tweet isn’t just criticism; it shifts the narrative, downgrading L2 from “Ethereum’s main scaling solution” to an “optional” choice. The trigger was his mention of declining Layer 1 fees and the planned gas increase in 2026, which Crypto Twitter interpreted as a “ladder pulling” on L2 tokens. Memes like “Vitalik disbands the L2 narrative” started circulating, along with articles about ZK-EVM launch and native precompiles. The story shifted from “more L2” to “specialized L2” (e.g., privacy or AI applications). The implication: progress in L1 scaling, like Glamsterdam, challenges some assumptions of a rollup-centric approach.
External reactions are mixed. Optimism co-founder welcomed modular architecture but acknowledged interoperability issues; Arbitrum emphasized that scaling remains core. Developers see differentiation opportunities, while traders worry about fragmentation and increased competition.
Data Does Not Support “L2 Is Dead”
Key conclusions:
Camp and Positioning Overview
Strategic Implications and Current Positioning
Summary: The market hasn’t fully digested Vitalik’s L1-oriented stance. Ethereum’s self-sufficiency is underestimated; long-term holders and institutional funds with native scaling exposure have higher win rates, while general-purpose L2 traders face declining odds. Post-Dencun, this divergence is likely to become more pronounced.
Judgment: This is a “bit early, not late” narrative shift window. The most advantageous positions are long-term holders and funds (adding ETH, patiently pricing L1 native scaling); next are builders capable of delivering differentiated functionalities (specialized L2s). General-purpose L2 trend traders are at a disadvantage and should reduce exposure or shift to select projects.