Ethereum (ETH), the largest programmable L1 blockchain network, might be missing critical scaling opportunities. Slowly but surely, users and dApps might migrate to more flexible and scalable blockchains, including sharded ones, says the veteran analyst.
The Open Network (TON), Solana (SOL), Tezos (XTZ): Justin Bons indicates scalable Ethereum (ETH) competitors
Ethereum (ETH) is "dropping the ball" by failing to meet the demand for Layer-1 blockchains. As a result, usage will inevitably move to competitors that are able to scale to meet the requirements of users. Justin Bons, founder and CIO of Cyber Capital, shared his opinion in X today, Oct. 20, 2023.
ETH is dropping the ball by failing to meet L1 demand
— Justin Bons (@Justin_Bons) October 20, 2023
Usage will inevitably move to competitors which can scale to meet demand
Whether it is SOL's parallelization, XTZ's enshrined rollups, or full sharding like in EGLD, NEAR & TON
ETH will definitely lose if it does not scale!
L1 competitors might rely on different scaling practices, including Solana's (SOL) parallelization or Tezos' (XTZ) enscrined rollups. Also, fully sharded blockchains like The Open Network (TON), NEAR Protocol (NEAR) and MultiversX (EGLD) might be dangerous competitors for Ethereum (ETH).
Sharding is a scaling practice that allows the blockchain to be split up among the ecosystem of interconnected sub-blockchains (shards).
Sharding is an endgame goal for Ethereum (ETH) on proof of stake, but it is still unclear when (and if) it is going to implement it.
NEAR Protocol (NEAR) is recognized as the first-ever fully sharded mainstream blockchain. Also, Zilliqa (ZIL) is among the leaders of this innovation.
Polygon introduces novel method of scaling, appoints Protocol Council
Besides Ethereum (ETH), Bons is an adamant critic of the current Bitcoin (BTC) design, which looks centralized to him. Also, he warns that security budget of the largest blockchain is on borrowed time.
Meanwhile, one of the largest EVM blockchains, Polygon (MATIC), accomplished a major milestone on its road to the Polygon 2.0 phase. In this phase, staking and security mechanisms in blockchain will be reconsidered. Stakers will be able to protect the integrity of several chains within Polygon (MATIC).
Yesterday, Polygon Labs shared the list of the first generation of Polygon Protocol Council members. It includes reputable Web3 experts and high-profile DeFi teams.