Most Ethereum scaling networks are unlikely to make it through 2026, according to new forecasts from 21Shares. Key Takeaways: TMost Ethereum L2s are Most Ethereum scaling networks are unlikely to make it through 2026, according to new forecasts from 21Shares. Key Takeaways: TMost Ethereum L2s are

Most Ethereum L2s May Not Survive 2026 as Base, Arbitrum, Optimism Tighten Grip: 21Shares

2025/12/11 21:22

Most Ethereum scaling networks are unlikely to make it through 2026, according to new forecasts from 21Shares.

Key Takeaways:

  • TMost Ethereum L2s are at risk of collapse in 2026 as activity concentrates overwhelmingly on Base, Arbitrum, and Optimism.
  • Smaller rollups are rapidly becoming “zombie chains,” with usage dropping 61%.
  • 21Shares expects the L2 landscape to consolidate around ETH-aligned, high-performance, and exchange-backed networks.

The firm’s latest State of Crypto outlook warns that the Layer-2 ecosystem has reached a breaking point after two years of rapid expansion, leaving only a handful of dominant players with meaningful traction.

Base, Arbitrum, Optimism Dominate as Dozens of Ethereum L2s Become ‘Zombie Chains’

More than 50 L2s currently compete for users, liquidity, and developers. However, by late 2025, market share had already consolidated around three networks, including Base, Arbitrum, and Optimism, which together processed nearly 90% of all L2 transactions, with Base alone surpassing 60%.

The rest of the field is slipping into irrelevance. Activity across smaller rollups has fallen sharply, with L2 usage down 61% since June, the report shows.

Many are now operating as so-called “zombie chains,” running with minimal user activity and evaporating liquidity.

Several projects have already failed. Kinto shut down entirely, Loopring closed its wallet service, and Blast’s total value locked collapsed 97%.

Even major DeFi protocols such as Aave and Synthetix scaled back their deployments on weaker L2s, citing poor liquidity and limited returns.

The Dencun upgrade’s 90% fee reduction triggered aggressive fee wars that pushed most rollups into losses. Base was the only L2 that turned a profit in 2025, earning around $55 million.

21Shares expects a “leaner, more resilient” set of networks to define Ethereum’s scaling layer by the end of 2026.

ETH-aligned designs like Linea, which redirect fees back to Ethereum through burns or validator rewards, aim to improve long-term sustainability.

Meanwhile, high-performance entrants such as MegaETH are targeting near-real-time execution to close the gap with fast monolithic chains.

Exchange-backed networks are also reshaping the landscape. Coinbase’s Base and Binance’s BNB Chain showed how centralized platforms can onboard millions directly onchain, while Bybit’s Mantle and Kraken’s Ink are expected to follow.

$1T Stablecoins, $400B ETPs, and the Rise of AI-Driven Finance

Beyond Ethereum’s scaling shakeout, 21Shares points to a series of structural shifts that are likely to reshape the digital asset landscape in 2026.

Stablecoins are on track to reach $1 trillion in circulation as they continue to gain ground in payments, remittances, and corporate finance.

At the same time, global crypto ETPs are expected to surpass $400 billion in assets, putting them in the same league as major equity index funds as institutional access broadens, per the report.

Decentralized finance is also set for a resurgence. The firm projects that DeFi’s total value locked will climb past $300 billion, helped by falling interest rates, growing stablecoin liquidity, and companies deploying idle treasury assets into onchain markets.

Prediction markets, one of the fastest-growing sectors of 2025, may cross $100 billion in annual trading volume as political uncertainty and macro volatility fuel demand for real-time event speculation, 21Shares said.

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