L1 narrative rollback weakens L2, but the funds remain unmoved

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L1 Regression Weakens the Central Position of L2, but Prices Remain Unchanged

Vitalik’s tweet is not just a slight adjustment to the roadmap — he downgraded L2 from “necessity” to “optional”. He stated that L1 can handle scaling on its own (lower fees, upcoming gas limit increases), and pointed out that L2’s decentralization still falls short. The topic shifted from “L2 saving Ethereum” to “L2 must prove its value, or else be sidelined.” The tweet spread quickly — over 15 major accounts retweeted, with 6.3 million views — and the core message is: L2 should differentiate itself in privacy, AI, or non-EVM directions. Meanwhile, The Block and ChainCatcher’s analyses both highlight that the real challenges remain compliance and liquidity fragmentation. On-chain? Little movement — Arbitrum and Optimism’s TVL are around $10B and $800M respectively, with DAU and ETH dropping 15%, but no clear correlation.

Camp Their Arguments Implications for Positions My Judgment
L1 Bulls Vitalik clearly favors L1 scaling; Arbitrum/Optimism TVL stable ($10B/$800M); according to TokenTerminal, fees are steady (about $1.3M/$50K monthly) Reinforce ETH’s role as the value layer, with long-term funds returning to the base layer Overestimated — L1 is more stable but can’t withstand macro downturns. Only RSI < 40 makes ETH a good buy
L2 Skeptics Compared to ETH (-15%), ARB -29%, OP -25% (CoinGecko); 30-day volatility 5-7%, weak correlation with ETH (0.1-0.3) Strengthen “rotation out” narrative; funds are evaluating whether to exit their L2 tokens without differentiation It’s correct to be bearish on ARB/OP — this volatility feels like a phased surrender. I will short generic L2s lacking differentiation
Pragmatists High engagement (2.6K replies, intense privacy discussions); but DAU remains stagnant (Arbitrum 150K-400K, Optimism 20K-40K) Cooling sentiment, focusing on interoperability risks; builders slowing down commitments to L2 Undervalued perspective — interoperability delays weaken composability. Focus on survivors, especially privacy-oriented chains
Macro Bears Fees flat YoY, no incremental TVL; reiterate “fee spiral collapse” argument Defensive stance; ETH is relatively resilient but still affected by sector rotation “Fee collapse” is overhyped — it’s more about liquidity tightening, not life or death. Hedge with ETH call options

This wave of dissemination exposes a gap between “cognitive consistency” and “funds’ actions”. Analysts generally dismiss hopes for a near-term L2 revival — Vitalik’s point that L2 should have “ultimate control” over its infrastructure is more constraining than catalytic. On-chain data (core metrics stable, low price correlation) suggest this shift happened almost in a “vacuum,” overshadowed by larger macro factors. But it does shift the narrative back to ETH’s central position.

  • Social media amplifies divergence: Bulls celebrate L1’s return to centrality, skeptics use the opportunity to criticize L2 for increasing liquidity fragmentation.
  • Data lags behind: TVL and DAU remain flat, indicating builders haven’t yet “voted with their feet.” Price declines are more driven by volatility than strategic migration.
  • Secondary effects are coming: If L2s don’t clarify their positioning soon, industry consolidation is likely — ETH absorbs value, generic players exit.

I disagree with the “Vitalik’s call” narrative — he’s pushing the topic, not capital. At least for now. Strategically, it’s better to: go long ETH basis, short overvalued L2s (like ARB), and bet on narrative pressure strengthening L1’s resilience.

Conclusion: If you’re still heavily invested in generic L2 tokens, you’re already behind. Builders and long-term holders should focus on ETH’s base layer; traders chasing old scaling narratives are passively losing. As fragmentation risks grow harder to ignore, shorting ARB/OP offers better risk-reward.

Assessment: For the “general-purpose L2” narrative, you’re already a latecomer; the most advantageous participants now are builders and long-term holders centered around Ethereum’s base layer, along with traders executing long ETH basis and short ARB/OP strategies.

ETH1.83%
ARB0.62%
OP0.16%
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