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So Vitalik just dropped something pretty significant that's making people rethink the whole L2 scaling narrative for Ethereum. He sold about 500k worth of ETH—roughly 212 tokens—to the Kanro Fund, which is his own charity focused on health, AI safety, and research. Nothing unusual there for him, but what caught everyone's attention was the post that came right after.
He basically said the rollup-centric vision that's been the dominant strategy for years doesn't make sense anymore. Not in the way everyone's been pushing it, anyway. Instead, he's proposing we think about L2s as a spectrum—some fully secured by Ethereum, others more loosely connected—where users pick based on what they actually need. It's a pretty stark shift from the "L2s are the answer to everything" narrative that's been driving billions in investment.
The market didn't take it well. ETH dropped nearly 10% in the 24 hours following the announcement, hitting around $2,117 at the time. What's interesting is the volume also tanked—down 31%—which suggests the move was driven more by low liquidity than actual conviction selling. The token's been hovering in the $2,060 range more recently, and trading has stabilized somewhat.
What makes this timing notable is that Vitalik's essentially questioning whether the entire infrastructure bet the ecosystem has been making actually solves the right problem. He's suggesting L2 teams should focus on differentiated value—privacy, app-specific efficiency, ultra-high throughput, stuff like that—rather than just chasing raw scaling numbers. That's a pretty big pivot from what most of these projects have been building toward.
The uncertainty is real. You've got an industry that's poured serious capital into L2 solutions, and now one of the most influential voices in crypto is saying the original thesis needs rethinking. Add that to the macro headwinds hitting everything, and you get the kind of volatility we're seeing. That said, institutional interest in large-cap crypto hasn't really wavered—ETF flows are still coming in. So it's more of a narrative recalibration than a fundamental crisis. Worth watching how the L2 teams respond to this though.