The original “Fat Protocol” theory posited that the value of cryptocurrencies would disproportionately flow to the underlying blockchain rather than applications. This view is no longer valid.
By 2026, value will flow to “control points”: interfaces that understand user intent, trading venues that internalize liquidity, issuers holding asset liabilities, and entities capable of tokenizing inefficient assets. Regardless of which chain ultimately prevails, which application becomes popular, or which narrative dominates, these entities will be able to collect fees.
This ranking clearly demonstrates, based on metrics such as revenue, user count, ARPU (average revenue per user per year), market dominance, and capital efficiency, where the true “fat” layers of value are today, why they are fat, and where the next wave of marginal value will flow.
1. “Fat” Wallets
Leader: Phantom
Annual Revenue: approximately $105 million (around $35 million in Q3 2025)
User Count: approximately 15 million monthly active users
ARPU: about $7/user/year
Market Share: roughly 39% of the Solana wallet market
Performance and Fit:
Leveraging its dominant position in the Intent Layer, Phantom has become the leading consumer wallet on the Solana platform. Positioned upstream of Swap, NFT, Perps, and payments, Phantom monetizes user behavior before value reaches DEXes or protocols.
The launch of Phantom Perps saw trading volume surpass $1 billion within weeks. This confirms that the wallet is evolving from a passive interface into an active financial venue. Phantom's $150 million Series C funding in January 2025, valuing it at $3 billion, reflects market recognition of this shift.
Main Competitors:
MetaMask: expanding monetization channels through integration of perpetual contracts and Swap, launching a $30 million LINEA incentive program to deepen ecosystem lock-in.
Trust Wallet: over 200 million downloads, intercepted $162 million in scams, demonstrating strong distributed payment capabilities, though ARPU is relatively weak.
2. “Fat” Blockchain
Leader: Ethereum
Protocol Annual Revenue: about $300 million
Users: approximately 8.6 million MAU
ARPU: about $30-35/user/year
Performance and Fit:
Ethereum remains the core settlement layer in crypto. Its value does not stem from high-throughput consumer execution but from its role as the final arbiter for high-value transactions, MEV extraction, stablecoins, and financial settlements across Rollups and institutions.
Ethereum's fee base is supported by MEV, blob fees, and settlement demand, rather than simply transaction volume. This makes its growth slower than execution chains but more resilient as capital concentrates.
Main Competitors:
Solana: leading “fat” execution chain, with peak monthly revenue around $240 million, driven by meme coins, perpetual trading, and consumer applications. Performance upgrades (Firedancer, Alpenglow) further solidify growth.
Base: the fastest-growing L2 by active users, with triple-digit growth in transaction volume; Uniswap's total traded volume exceeds $200 billion—positioned as Ethereum's consumer execution branch.
3. “Fat” Perp DEX
Leader: Hyperliquid
Annual Revenue: approximately $950 million to $1 billion
Open Interest: about $6.5 billion
Perpetual Trading Volume (30 days): about $225 billion
Performance and Fit:
Perpetual contracts are the most profitable trading method in crypto, and Hyperliquid dominates this market. By integrating liquidity, execution, and order flow on a dedicated chain, Hyperliquid charges fees while avoiding MEV leakage and routing fragmentation.
In July 2025 alone, Hyperliquid accounted for about 35% of all blockchain protocol revenue and led all crypto projects in token buybacks.
Main Competitors:
Lighter: rapid early growth, over $1 trillion in cumulative trading volume, about $300 billion monthly trading volume, but with lower profit margins.
Drift: approximately $2 trillion in cumulative trading volume, $3.2 billion in TVL, about $49 million in revenue—strong growth but weaker market dominance.
4. “Fat” Lending
Leader: Aave
Annual Revenue: about $115 million
User Count: approximately 120,000 monthly active users
TVL: about $32-35 billion
Capital Utilization Rate: around 40%
Performance and Fit:
Aave is a leading DeFi lending platform. While lending profits are typically lower than trading platforms, Aave's scale, resilience, and stable institutional funding compensate for this.
The protocol is expected to surpass $3 trillion in total deposits by 2025, with active loans reaching about $29 billion. Lending growth is slow but steady.
Main Competitors:
Fluid: leading liquidity layer, with cross-chain TVL around $5-6 billion, ranking third in lending, second in monthly active users, supporting efficient DEX trading (volume $150 billion, fees over $23 million).
Morpho Blue: over $1 billion in deposits, the largest deposit protocol on Base, indicating a shift toward modular, market-driven lending models.
5. “Fat” RWA Protocols
Leader: BlackRock BUIDL
Asset Management Scale: about $2.3 billion
Yield: approximately 4% (tokenized US Treasuries)
Holders: fewer than 100 (institutional investors)
Performance and Fit:
Growth in RWA depends on scale and trust, not user numbers. BUIDL has expanded to seven blockchains and is accepted as collateral by CEXs, building a structural bridge between TradFi and on-chain finance.
Main Competitors:
Ondo Finance: TVL over $1 billion, approved under MiCA, consolidating its position as a leading crypto-native RWA distributor.
6. “Fat” LRT / Re-staking Layer
Leader: EigenLayer
Re-staking Assets: about $12.4 billion
Annual Fee Revenue: approximately $70 million
User Count: about 300,000 to 400,000
Performance and Fit:
EigenLayer is a foundational re-staking layer, monetizing by leasing Ethereum's security to AVS. The launch of EigenCloud (EigenAI, EigenCompute) extends it into verifiable off-chain computation.
Main Competitors:
Ether.fi: about $100 million in annual revenue, actively repurchasing ETHFI, with a strong consumer-facing profit model via Cash.
7. “Fat” Aggregator / Routing Layer
Leader: Jupiter
Annual Revenue: about $12 million
DEX Aggregator Trading Volume (30 days): about $46 billion
Market Share: roughly 90% of Solana aggregator volume
Performance and Fit:
Aggregators profit through decision-making authority. Jupiter captures value by controlling routing, pricing, and execution quality, intercepting spreads before liquidity providers.
Main Competitors:
COWSwap: approximately $110 billion in cumulative trading volume, offering MEV protection, especially suitable for institutional traders.
8. “Fat” Stablecoin Issuers
Leader: Tether (USDT)
Circulating Supply: about $185 billion
Annual Revenue: over $10 billion
Treasury Holdings: about $135 billion
Performance and Fit:
Tether is the most profitable entity in crypto. Stablecoin issuers profit from yields on government bonds, making their structure superior to most protocols.
Main Competitors:
USDC (Circle): about $78 billion in supply, growing rapidly but with lower profit margins.
Ethena USDe: about $12 billion in supply, representing a challenger model driven by synthetic yields.
9. “Fat” Prediction Markets
Leader: Polymarket
Annual Revenue: (not disclosed)
Monthly Trading Volume: about $1.5-2 billion (peaking during major events)
User Count: about 200,000-300,000 active traders per month
Performance and Fit:
Prediction markets profit from attention and uncertainty. Their key structural advantage is information attraction. Liquidity concentrates where probabilities are perceived as most accurate. Once this trust cycle forms, challengers find it hard to establish meaningful trading depth.
Polymarket's popularity is not just due to active users but because it has become a global source of trending events—an extremely profitable form of attention.
Prediction markets represent a new “Fat” layer:
Not dependent on TVL
No market directional volatility involved
Cost elasticity during event periods
Strong narrative dissemination (probability of headlines)
This makes them one of the few crypto applications with positive convexity to macroeconomic and political fluctuations.
Main Competitors:
Kalshi: regulated by the US CFTC, supports event trading in USD (e.g., sports/politics), sometimes surpassing Polymarket in volume, attracting TradFi interest, but still lagging in native crypto liquidity.
10. “Fat” MEV
Leader: Flashbots
Annual MEV Extraction: about $230 million
Total Managed MEV: over $1.5 billion
Performance and Fit:
MEV is an invisible tax on block space. Flashbots has institutionalized MEV extraction and redistribution, making it a critical infrastructure for Ethereum and Rollups.
Main Competitors:
Jito: captured about 66% of Solana fees in Q1 2025 through MEV tips and BAM.
Arbitrum: since launch, has collected about $10 million in fees, indicating MEV monetization is moving upstream.
Related: “Fat applications” are dead, welcome to the era of “Fat distribution.”
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
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IELTS
· 01-16 13:17
Six-hour outage freezes over $10 billion in assets: A warning summary behind the Sui consensus interruption event
The Sui blockchain recently experienced nearly 6 hours of network downtime, freezing approximately $1 billion in assets. This is the second major failure since its independent launch. The incident has prompted in-depth reflection on the relationship between the complexity and fragility of high-performance blockchains, while also highlighting that decentralization does not necessarily mean high availability. At the same time, the market's psychological threshold for technical outages has increased, with greater focus on long-term stability and team response capabilities. Moving forward, Sui needs to enhance engineering trust to ensure similar issues are avoided again.
Introduction: A single outage tests the resilience of a new public chain
Crypto "Fat Protocol": Key Players in the Top 10 Core Profit Areas
Author: Stacy Muur
Translation: Felix, PANews
The original “Fat Protocol” theory posited that the value of cryptocurrencies would disproportionately flow to the underlying blockchain rather than applications. This view is no longer valid.
By 2026, value will flow to “control points”: interfaces that understand user intent, trading venues that internalize liquidity, issuers holding asset liabilities, and entities capable of tokenizing inefficient assets. Regardless of which chain ultimately prevails, which application becomes popular, or which narrative dominates, these entities will be able to collect fees.
This ranking clearly demonstrates, based on metrics such as revenue, user count, ARPU (average revenue per user per year), market dominance, and capital efficiency, where the true “fat” layers of value are today, why they are fat, and where the next wave of marginal value will flow.
1. “Fat” Wallets
Leader: Phantom
Annual Revenue: approximately $105 million (around $35 million in Q3 2025)
User Count: approximately 15 million monthly active users
ARPU: about $7/user/year
Market Share: roughly 39% of the Solana wallet market
Performance and Fit:
Leveraging its dominant position in the Intent Layer, Phantom has become the leading consumer wallet on the Solana platform. Positioned upstream of Swap, NFT, Perps, and payments, Phantom monetizes user behavior before value reaches DEXes or protocols.
The launch of Phantom Perps saw trading volume surpass $1 billion within weeks. This confirms that the wallet is evolving from a passive interface into an active financial venue. Phantom's $150 million Series C funding in January 2025, valuing it at $3 billion, reflects market recognition of this shift.
Main Competitors:
2. “Fat” Blockchain
Leader: Ethereum
Protocol Annual Revenue: about $300 million
Users: approximately 8.6 million MAU
ARPU: about $30-35/user/year
Performance and Fit:
Ethereum remains the core settlement layer in crypto. Its value does not stem from high-throughput consumer execution but from its role as the final arbiter for high-value transactions, MEV extraction, stablecoins, and financial settlements across Rollups and institutions.
Ethereum's fee base is supported by MEV, blob fees, and settlement demand, rather than simply transaction volume. This makes its growth slower than execution chains but more resilient as capital concentrates.
Main Competitors:
3. “Fat” Perp DEX
Leader: Hyperliquid
Annual Revenue: approximately $950 million to $1 billion
Open Interest: about $6.5 billion
Perpetual Trading Volume (30 days): about $225 billion
Performance and Fit:
Perpetual contracts are the most profitable trading method in crypto, and Hyperliquid dominates this market. By integrating liquidity, execution, and order flow on a dedicated chain, Hyperliquid charges fees while avoiding MEV leakage and routing fragmentation.
In July 2025 alone, Hyperliquid accounted for about 35% of all blockchain protocol revenue and led all crypto projects in token buybacks.
Main Competitors:
4. “Fat” Lending
Leader: Aave
Annual Revenue: about $115 million
User Count: approximately 120,000 monthly active users
TVL: about $32-35 billion
Capital Utilization Rate: around 40%
Performance and Fit:
Aave is a leading DeFi lending platform. While lending profits are typically lower than trading platforms, Aave's scale, resilience, and stable institutional funding compensate for this.
The protocol is expected to surpass $3 trillion in total deposits by 2025, with active loans reaching about $29 billion. Lending growth is slow but steady.
Main Competitors:
5. “Fat” RWA Protocols
Leader: BlackRock BUIDL
Asset Management Scale: about $2.3 billion
Yield: approximately 4% (tokenized US Treasuries)
Holders: fewer than 100 (institutional investors)
Performance and Fit:
Growth in RWA depends on scale and trust, not user numbers. BUIDL has expanded to seven blockchains and is accepted as collateral by CEXs, building a structural bridge between TradFi and on-chain finance.
Main Competitors:
6. “Fat” LRT / Re-staking Layer
Leader: EigenLayer
Re-staking Assets: about $12.4 billion
Annual Fee Revenue: approximately $70 million
User Count: about 300,000 to 400,000
Performance and Fit:
EigenLayer is a foundational re-staking layer, monetizing by leasing Ethereum's security to AVS. The launch of EigenCloud (EigenAI, EigenCompute) extends it into verifiable off-chain computation.
Main Competitors:
7. “Fat” Aggregator / Routing Layer
Leader: Jupiter
Annual Revenue: about $12 million
DEX Aggregator Trading Volume (30 days): about $46 billion
Market Share: roughly 90% of Solana aggregator volume
Performance and Fit:
Aggregators profit through decision-making authority. Jupiter captures value by controlling routing, pricing, and execution quality, intercepting spreads before liquidity providers.
Main Competitors:
8. “Fat” Stablecoin Issuers
Leader: Tether (USDT)
Circulating Supply: about $185 billion
Annual Revenue: over $10 billion
Treasury Holdings: about $135 billion
Performance and Fit:
Tether is the most profitable entity in crypto. Stablecoin issuers profit from yields on government bonds, making their structure superior to most protocols.
Main Competitors:
9. “Fat” Prediction Markets
Leader: Polymarket
Annual Revenue: (not disclosed)
Monthly Trading Volume: about $1.5-2 billion (peaking during major events)
User Count: about 200,000-300,000 active traders per month
Performance and Fit:
Prediction markets profit from attention and uncertainty. Their key structural advantage is information attraction. Liquidity concentrates where probabilities are perceived as most accurate. Once this trust cycle forms, challengers find it hard to establish meaningful trading depth.
Polymarket's popularity is not just due to active users but because it has become a global source of trending events—an extremely profitable form of attention.
Prediction markets represent a new “Fat” layer:
This makes them one of the few crypto applications with positive convexity to macroeconomic and political fluctuations.
Main Competitors:
10. “Fat” MEV
Leader: Flashbots
Annual MEV Extraction: about $230 million
Total Managed MEV: over $1.5 billion
Performance and Fit:
MEV is an invisible tax on block space. Flashbots has institutionalized MEV extraction and redistribution, making it a critical infrastructure for Ethereum and Rollups.
Main Competitors:
Related: “Fat applications” are dead, welcome to the era of “Fat distribution.”