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Just caught Vitalik's latest take on the L2 ecosystem and it's pretty spicy. He's basically calling out the industry for building too many copypasta chains - and honestly, he's got a point.
So here's what he's saying: we've hit this weird moment where everyone's just forking the same playbook. You spin up an EVM chain, slap an optimistic bridge on it, add a one-week delay, and boom - you're a layer-2 now. He's comparing it to how crypto used to just copy Compound's governance design over and over. It's become the lazy default.
The core issue Vitalik's highlighting is that the whole 'rollup excuse' is getting thinner. Ethereum itself is scaling, fees are staying low, and the base layer is getting more throughput than it used to. So the argument of 'we exist to be Ethereum but cheaper' doesn't hit as hard anymore. Why do we need another copypasta L2 when Ethereum is already providing way more blockspace?
He's also calling out the marketing side of things. A lot of projects market themselves as deeply connected to Ethereum while actually running as pretty standalone networks. Having a bridge doesn't make you part of Ethereum's core architecture - that's just not how it works. His point: vibes need to match substance. Don't tell people you're tightly integrated with Ethereum if you're basically just cross-posting transactions.
But here's where it gets interesting - Vitalik's not just dunking on L2s for the sake of it. He outlined two models he actually thinks make sense going forward. First: app-specific systems where Ethereum stays a first-class component for settlement or verification, but execution happens elsewhere. Second: institutional or application-driven chains that publish cryptographic proofs back to Ethereum. These aren't Ethereum, but they're building toward similar goals around transparency and verifiability.
The reactions have been telling. Arbitrum's saying they should be seen as allies, not competitors. Base is pushing back that rollups need to offer more than just cheaper fees. Even Polygon's framing it as a call for clearer positioning. Everyone's basically saying: okay, fine, we get it - stop with the copypasta approach and figure out what you actually bring to the table.
It's a shift in how the industry's thinking about L2s. The easy days of just cloning the EVM and calling it innovation might actually be over.