Futures
Accédez à des centaines de contrats perpétuels
TradFi
Or
Une plateforme pour les actifs mondiaux
Options
Hot
Tradez des options classiques de style européen
Compte unifié
Maximiser l'efficacité de votre capital
Trading démo
Introduction au trading futures
Préparez-vous à trader des contrats futurs
Événements futures
Participez aux événements et gagnez
Demo Trading
Utiliser des fonds virtuels pour faire l'expérience du trading sans risque
Lancer
CandyDrop
Collecte des candies pour obtenir des airdrops
Launchpool
Staking rapide, Gagnez de potentiels nouveaux jetons
HODLer Airdrop
Conservez des GT et recevez d'énormes airdrops gratuitement
Pre-IPOs
Accédez à l'intégralité des introductions en bourse mondiales
Points Alpha
Tradez on-chain et gagnez des airdrops
Points Futures
Gagnez des points Futures et réclamez vos récompenses d’airdrop.
Investissement
Simple Earn
Gagner des intérêts avec des jetons inutilisés
Investissement automatique
Auto-invest régulier
Double investissement
Profitez de la volatilité du marché
Staking souple
Gagnez des récompenses grâce au staking flexible
Prêt Crypto
0 Fees
Mettre en gage un crypto pour en emprunter une autre
Centre de prêts
Centre de prêts intégré
Vitalik recently issued a sharp critique of the Ethereum L2 ecosystem, which he believes has fallen into a boring pattern. He said many layer-2s now are just copying existing EVM designs, adding standard bridges, and calling it a day. He refers to this as 'copypasta infrastructure' — basically a blockchain version of Compound governance forks.
What’s interesting about his critique is that he doesn’t outright reject L2s altogether. But he is definitely annoyed with projects that market themselves as super connected to Ethereum when they are mostly standalone networks. Just having a bridge doesn’t automatically make you part of the core Ethereum architecture, he said.
According to Vitalik, there are two directions still worth pursuing. First, application-specific systems that are tightly integrated, where Ethereum remains a key component for settlement or verification. Second, chains driven by institutions or applications that issue cryptographic proofs or state commitments back to Ethereum. This isn’t Ethereum per se, but it can still push similar goals regarding transparency and verifiability.
Reactions from the L2 ecosystem are quite varied. Arbitrum’s Steven Goldfeder said their network should be viewed as a close ally of Ethereum, not Ethereum itself. Meanwhile, Base’s Jesse Pollak argued that rollups need to offer more than just cheaper fees, especially now that the Ethereum base layer is more efficient. Polygon leadership interprets this critique more as a push for clarity rather than an existential threat.
The role of copying in this ecosystem is becoming clearer — Vitalik is basically saying the industry needs to stop with lazy copy-paste approaches and start thinking about truly unique value propositions. With Ethereum’s throughput continuously increasing and fees decreasing, the old justification of L2s as ‘Ethereum but cheaper’ is becoming weaker.
Oh, and speaking of market movements, XRP yesterday dropped from $1.36 to $1.33 with high volume, indicating aggressive selling. The price is now stuck below the $1.35 level with a resistance zone at $1.40-$1.41 that repeatedly limits upside movement. Interesting timing with all these technical discussions — the market is digesting multiple factors at once.