Weekly Active User Rankings Show Strong L1 Competition
The cryptocurrency space just released its weekly active user metrics, and honestly, the numbers paint a pretty competitive picture. Layer 1 networks seem to be where most of the action is happening right now. I think it’s interesting how these weekly snapshots give us a sense of where people are actually spending their time in the crypto world.
BNB Chain, which is part of Binance’s ecosystem, managed to hold onto its top position. They reported over 17 million weekly active users, which is quite substantial when you think about it. That’s a lot of people interacting with the chain in just one week.
Other Networks Showing Strong Performance
But it wasn’t just BNB Chain making waves. NEAR Protocol and Solana both caught my attention with their high interaction volumes. Solana in particular had an impressive 25% increase in weekly active users. That’s a significant jump, and it makes me wonder what’s driving that growth. Maybe it’s the lower transaction costs or perhaps some new applications gaining traction.
Polygon also showed a strong recovery this week. After some fluctuations in previous periods, it’s good to see them bouncing back. The data suggests that user-driven growth is still heavily concentrated on these layer 1 blockchains rather than layer 2 solutions.
How the Data is Calculated
The methodology behind these numbers uses a 7-day rolling window approach. They’re measuring unique users across the different chains, which gives a more accurate picture than just counting transactions. They use something called HyperLogLog algorithms to calculate this, which helps account for the fact that some users might interact with the chain multiple times in a week.
This approach makes sense because it prevents double-counting and gives a clearer view of actual user adoption rather than just transaction volume. Still, I should note that these are just metrics about user activity – they don’t necessarily reflect investment potential or network security.
Looking at the broader trend, it seems like the competition among these major layer 1 networks is heating up. Each seems to be carving out its own space, with different strengths and user bases. It’ll be interesting to see if this pattern continues in the coming weeks or if we start seeing more movement toward layer 2 solutions.
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