Before Ethereum’s recent upgrade, Layer 2 (L2) networks were major buyers of ETH. They used it for transactions and token burns, which reduced Ethereum’s overall supply and strengthened the network. This system supported projects like Celestia and Avail, helping Ethereum maintain deflationary appeal. But now things have changed.
What exactly happened to Ethereum?
— H.E. Justin Sun
(@justinsuntron) March 12, 2025
After the upgrade, things changed. Now, L2s are selling more ETH than they buy. This means Ethereum’s supply is increasing instead of shrinking, making it less attractive as a deflationary asset. Investors are concerned because this shift weakens the network’s stability.
It’s been death every since the blob upgrade. Before the blob upgrade, the L2’s were huge buyers of eth through token burn. Plus it supported coins like celestia and avail. Since the blob upgrade, the l2’s net sell eth. The eth supply is going up. It was going down before.
— Solanasaurusrex.sol (@Christo86383094) March 12, 2025
No clear vision.
Either PoW for sovereignty and decentralization OR PoS with very low fees and scalability.
But right now they have a foot in both camps which makes the protocol too costly compared to other L2s like Starknet and not very decentralized like it was with PoW.
— Tom Megati (@TomMegati) March 12, 2025
Vitalik pic.twitter.com/wDvXoRKfeI
— Robin Nakamoto (@RobinNakamoto) March 12, 2025
The post Justin Sun Asked ‘What Happened to Ethereum?’: Here’s The Answer appeared first on 99Bitcoins.