Mainstream public blockchains often do not attract public attention, but the data speaks silently — over 340 million active accounts worldwide are conducting various transactions on this chain.
From user behavior, an interesting binary pattern is emerging. Small-value addresses maintain high-frequency activity, primarily used for cross-border transfers, daily payments, and asset preservation hedging, reflecting genuine and everyday rigid needs. Meanwhile, the proportion of large wallets remains stable, with institutional-level funds continuously choosing to deploy long-term on this chain, fully demonstrating its recognition and reliability as a value transfer channel.
The on-chain hard data for 2026 is in front of us: the 340 million account scale is not an exaggeration but an intuitive result of users voting with their feet. From small daily payments to large institutional transfers, the complete scenario coverage showcases this public chain’s unique advantage of being both retail-friendly and institutionally secure.
This full-scenario ecosystem maturity is precisely the ultimate goal many project teams are still exploring.
View Original
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.
9 Likes
Reward
9
7
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
TommyTeacher
· 9h ago
340 million accounts sound impressive, but how many are actually active? You need to analyze the data in detail to find out.
View OriginalReply0
GateUser-00be86fc
· 01-09 17:06
340 million active accounts are indeed impressive, but how many are actually in use?
View OriginalReply0
MemeCurator
· 01-08 08:47
340 million accounts, this data is solid, but honestly, it's awkward when public opinion doesn't give it face.
Institutions and retail investors are both using it, what does that mean? It means it's a truly active chain, no hype.
This is what Web3 should look like, right? The overlooked ones are often the most stable.
View OriginalReply0
ProbablyNothing
· 01-08 08:45
340 million accounts... Just thinking about this number is outrageous. Is it real or not?
The smart ones are the silent earners; those who ride the trend every day are falling behind.
From small payments to large transfers, this is what the ecosystem should look like. Other chains should learn from this.
View OriginalReply0
OnChainSleuth
· 01-08 08:42
Three hundred forty million accounts, right? Data doesn't lie. Projects that work quietly often perform the best.
View OriginalReply0
DegenDreamer
· 01-08 08:30
34 million accounts, is that real? It seems like the numbers can be exaggerated; the true trading volume will tell the real story.
View OriginalReply0
blockBoy
· 01-08 08:20
340 million accounts—this number truly can't be sustained anymore; the choices of real users won't deceive.
Mainstream public blockchains often do not attract public attention, but the data speaks silently — over 340 million active accounts worldwide are conducting various transactions on this chain.
From user behavior, an interesting binary pattern is emerging. Small-value addresses maintain high-frequency activity, primarily used for cross-border transfers, daily payments, and asset preservation hedging, reflecting genuine and everyday rigid needs. Meanwhile, the proportion of large wallets remains stable, with institutional-level funds continuously choosing to deploy long-term on this chain, fully demonstrating its recognition and reliability as a value transfer channel.
The on-chain hard data for 2026 is in front of us: the 340 million account scale is not an exaggeration but an intuitive result of users voting with their feet. From small daily payments to large institutional transfers, the complete scenario coverage showcases this public chain’s unique advantage of being both retail-friendly and institutionally secure.
This full-scenario ecosystem maturity is precisely the ultimate goal many project teams are still exploring.