For Ethereum, this strategic correction is maintained through “acknowledging reality” rather than “defending outdated assumptions,” thereby preserving its credibility.
Article by: YQ
Translation: Saoirse, Foresight News
Since 2015, I have been deeply involved in scalability technology research, exploring all technical iterations from sharding, Plasma, application chains (App Chains), to Rollup. I have worked closely with every major Rollup technology stack and team in the ecosystem. Therefore, when Vitalik’s published content fundamentally reshapes our understanding of Layer2 (L2), I pay special attention. The post he published on February 3rd is one such critical piece.
What Vitalik has done is not easy — to admit that the core assumptions of 2020 did not materialize as expected. Such honesty is often avoided by most leaders. Back then, the “Rollup-centric” roadmap was based on the premise that “L2 will serve as Ethereum’s ‘branding sharding’.” But four years of market data tell a different story: L2 has evolved into platforms with independent economic incentive mechanisms, and Ethereum Layer1’s scalability has far exceeded expectations. The original vision has long been out of touch with reality.
In fact, continuing to defend the old narrative would have been the easier choice — for example, forcing teams to pursue a vision that the market has already rejected. But that is not a sign of strong leadership. The truly wise approach is to acknowledge the gap between expectations and reality, propose a new direction, and move toward a brighter future. And this post does exactly that.
Vitalik’s Diagnosis of the Core Issues
The post highlights two urgent realities requiring strategic adjustment:
First, the decentralization process of L2 is far slower than expected. Currently, only three mainstream L2s (Arbitrum, OP Mainnet, Base) have reached the first stage of decentralization; some L2 teams have explicitly stated that due to regulatory requirements or business models, they may never pursue full decentralization. This is not a moral “failure,” but a reflection of economic realities — for L2 operators, sequencer revenue is a core business model.
Second, Ethereum Layer1 has achieved significant scalability. Currently, L1 fees are low, the Pectra upgrade doubled data block capacity, and plans are in place to continue increasing the Gas limit through 2026. When the Rollup roadmap was initially designed, “high L1 costs and network congestion” were fundamental assumptions; now, that premise no longer holds. L1 can now handle large volumes of transactions at reasonable costs, shifting the value proposition of L2 from “a necessity for availability” to “an optional solution for specific use cases.”
Vitalik’s most significant conceptual contribution is freeing L2 from the “single category, unified obligation” framework and redefining it as “a diverse presence along the trust spectrum.” The previous metaphor of “branding sharding” implicitly assumed all L2s needed to pursue the second stage of decentralization and serve as an extension of Ethereum, bearing the same value and security guarantees as L1. The new framework recognizes that different L2s have different purposes; for projects with specific needs, zero-stage or first-stage decentralization can be a reasonable endpoint.
This strategic redefinition is significant because it breaks the implicit judgment that “L2s that do not pursue full decentralization are failures.” For example, a regulated L2 serving institutional clients that requires asset freezing is not “a flawed Arbitrum,” but rather “a differentiated product targeting different markets.” By acknowledging this “trust spectrum,” Vitalik allows L2s to honestly define their own positioning without having to make unmotivated promises of decentralization.
Different trust levels correspond to different use cases — all levels can reasonably exist
Ethereum L2 Trust Level Classification Table
Native Rollup Precompile Proposal
The core technical idea in Vitalik’s post is the “Native Rollup Precompile” solution. Currently, each L2 must independently build a system to prove state transitions to Ethereum: Optimistic Rollup uses fraud proofs with a 7-day challenge period, ZK Rollup employs validity proofs based on custom circuits. These implementations require independent auditing, may contain vulnerabilities, and need updates when Ethereum hard forks change EVM behavior. This “fragmented” situation poses security risks and maintenance burdens for the entire ecosystem.
The “Native Rollup Precompile” involves embedding the “EVM execution verification” function directly into Ethereum. In the future, L2s will no longer need to maintain custom provers; they can simply call this shared infrastructure. The advantages are significant: only one codebase needs auditing (rather than dozens), it can automatically upgrade with Ethereum, and once the precompile is battle-tested, it may even eliminate the need for a security committee.
Comparison of Ethereum Native Rollup Precompile Architecture Before and After
Synchronized Composability Vision
In a detailed post on ethresear.ch, Vitalik elaborates on a mechanism to achieve “synchronized composability” between L1 and L2. Currently, transferring assets or executing logic across L1 and L2 either requires waiting for final confirmation (7 days for Optimistic Rollup, hours for ZK Rollup) or relying on fast bridges with counterparty risks. “Synchronized composability” allows transactions to “atomically use L1 and L2 states” — meaning cross-layer read/write operations within a single transaction either succeed entirely or roll back completely.
This mechanism involves three types of blocks:
Regular ordering blocks: for low-latency L2 transactions;
Slot-ending blocks: mark the boundaries of time windows;
Base blocks: can be built permissionlessly within the slot window after the slot-ending block.
During the window of base blocks, any block builder can create blocks that interact with both L1 and L2 states.
The three block types support periodic synchronization and interaction between L1 and L2
L2 Teams’ Responses
Mainstream L2 teams responded within hours, demonstrating healthy strategic diversity — precisely the effect Vitalik’s “trust spectrum” framework aims for: different teams can choose different positions without pretending to move toward the same endpoint.
Divergent responses from four major Ethereum L2 projects to Vitalik’s “L2 Reset” proposal
This diversity of responses is healthy:
Arbitrum emphasizes independence and self-sufficiency;
Base focuses on applications and users;
Linea aligns closely with Vitalik’s proposed native Rollup direction;
Optimism acknowledges current challenges while claiming ongoing improvements.
There is no right or wrong in these positions — they are strategic choices targeting different market segments, which is exactly the rationality recognized by the “trust spectrum” framework.
Vitalik’s Recognition of the Economic Realities of L2
One of the key significances of this post is the implicit acknowledgment of L2’s economic attributes. When he mentions that “some L2s, due to ‘regulatory requirements’ (retaining ultimate control), may ‘never surpass first-stage decentralization,’” he is essentially recognizing that L2s are not idealized “branding sharding,” but legitimate economic entities with legal business interests. Sequencer revenue is real, regulatory compliance is real — expecting L2s to abandon these interests for ideological reasons from the start is unrealistic.
L2 retains most fee revenue — this economic reality shapes decentralization incentives
Vitalik’s Future Pathways
Vitalik’s post is not just about “diagnosing problems” but also “solving problems.” He sketches out several concrete directions for L2s that want to maintain value amidst ongoing Layer1 scalability improvements. These are not mandatory requirements but suggested paths for differentiation when “cheaper Ethereum” is no longer the core competitive advantage.
Differentiated value directions for Ethereum L2
Rational honesty in leadership enables adaptive ecosystem development
Summary
In February 2026, Vitalik Buterin published this post, marking a key recalibration of Ethereum’s strategy toward L2. Its core insight is that L2 has evolved into independent platforms with legitimate economic interests, rather than “branding sharding” bearing obligations to Ethereum. Vitalik does not oppose this reality but proposes to recognize differentiation through the “trust spectrum,” strengthen collaboration efficiency via “Native Rollup Infrastructure,” and enable cross-layer interaction through “Synchronized Composability” — thus embracing reality.
Responses from the L2 ecosystem show healthy diversity: Arbitrum emphasizes independence, Base focuses on applications, Linea aligns with the native Rollup direction, and Optimism acknowledges challenges and pushes for improvements. This diversity is the expected outcome of the “trust spectrum” framework: different teams can pursue different strategies without pretending to follow the same path.
For Ethereum, this strategic correction through “acknowledging reality” rather than “defending outdated assumptions” preserves its credibility. Considering the maturity of ZK-EVM technology, related proposals are feasible; strategic proposals also create space for efficient ecosystem evolution. This exemplifies “adaptive leadership” in technology: recognizing environmental changes and proposing new paths rather than stubbornly sticking to rejected strategies.
Having worked in scalability research for a decade and operated a Rollup infrastructure company for four years, I have seen too many leaders refuse to adapt when facts change — often with poor results. Vitalik’s choice is not easy: openly admitting that the 2020 vision needs updating. But it is the right choice. Clinging to market-rejected narratives benefits no one. The direction forward is much clearer than a week ago — and that alone is highly valuable.
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Vitalik's Layer2 Reset: Can It Save Ethereum?
For Ethereum, this strategic correction is maintained through “acknowledging reality” rather than “defending outdated assumptions,” thereby preserving its credibility.
Article by: YQ
Translation: Saoirse, Foresight News
Since 2015, I have been deeply involved in scalability technology research, exploring all technical iterations from sharding, Plasma, application chains (App Chains), to Rollup. I have worked closely with every major Rollup technology stack and team in the ecosystem. Therefore, when Vitalik’s published content fundamentally reshapes our understanding of Layer2 (L2), I pay special attention. The post he published on February 3rd is one such critical piece.
What Vitalik has done is not easy — to admit that the core assumptions of 2020 did not materialize as expected. Such honesty is often avoided by most leaders. Back then, the “Rollup-centric” roadmap was based on the premise that “L2 will serve as Ethereum’s ‘branding sharding’.” But four years of market data tell a different story: L2 has evolved into platforms with independent economic incentive mechanisms, and Ethereum Layer1’s scalability has far exceeded expectations. The original vision has long been out of touch with reality.
In fact, continuing to defend the old narrative would have been the easier choice — for example, forcing teams to pursue a vision that the market has already rejected. But that is not a sign of strong leadership. The truly wise approach is to acknowledge the gap between expectations and reality, propose a new direction, and move toward a brighter future. And this post does exactly that.
Vitalik’s Diagnosis of the Core Issues
The post highlights two urgent realities requiring strategic adjustment:
First, the decentralization process of L2 is far slower than expected. Currently, only three mainstream L2s (Arbitrum, OP Mainnet, Base) have reached the first stage of decentralization; some L2 teams have explicitly stated that due to regulatory requirements or business models, they may never pursue full decentralization. This is not a moral “failure,” but a reflection of economic realities — for L2 operators, sequencer revenue is a core business model.
Second, Ethereum Layer1 has achieved significant scalability. Currently, L1 fees are low, the Pectra upgrade doubled data block capacity, and plans are in place to continue increasing the Gas limit through 2026. When the Rollup roadmap was initially designed, “high L1 costs and network congestion” were fundamental assumptions; now, that premise no longer holds. L1 can now handle large volumes of transactions at reasonable costs, shifting the value proposition of L2 from “a necessity for availability” to “an optional solution for specific use cases.”
Vitalik’s identified core realities requiring strategic adjustment
Reconstruction of the Trust Spectrum
Vitalik’s most significant conceptual contribution is freeing L2 from the “single category, unified obligation” framework and redefining it as “a diverse presence along the trust spectrum.” The previous metaphor of “branding sharding” implicitly assumed all L2s needed to pursue the second stage of decentralization and serve as an extension of Ethereum, bearing the same value and security guarantees as L1. The new framework recognizes that different L2s have different purposes; for projects with specific needs, zero-stage or first-stage decentralization can be a reasonable endpoint.
This strategic redefinition is significant because it breaks the implicit judgment that “L2s that do not pursue full decentralization are failures.” For example, a regulated L2 serving institutional clients that requires asset freezing is not “a flawed Arbitrum,” but rather “a differentiated product targeting different markets.” By acknowledging this “trust spectrum,” Vitalik allows L2s to honestly define their own positioning without having to make unmotivated promises of decentralization.
Different trust levels correspond to different use cases — all levels can reasonably exist
Ethereum L2 Trust Level Classification Table
Native Rollup Precompile Proposal
The core technical idea in Vitalik’s post is the “Native Rollup Precompile” solution. Currently, each L2 must independently build a system to prove state transitions to Ethereum: Optimistic Rollup uses fraud proofs with a 7-day challenge period, ZK Rollup employs validity proofs based on custom circuits. These implementations require independent auditing, may contain vulnerabilities, and need updates when Ethereum hard forks change EVM behavior. This “fragmented” situation poses security risks and maintenance burdens for the entire ecosystem.
The “Native Rollup Precompile” involves embedding the “EVM execution verification” function directly into Ethereum. In the future, L2s will no longer need to maintain custom provers; they can simply call this shared infrastructure. The advantages are significant: only one codebase needs auditing (rather than dozens), it can automatically upgrade with Ethereum, and once the precompile is battle-tested, it may even eliminate the need for a security committee.
Comparison of Ethereum Native Rollup Precompile Architecture Before and After
Synchronized Composability Vision
In a detailed post on ethresear.ch, Vitalik elaborates on a mechanism to achieve “synchronized composability” between L1 and L2. Currently, transferring assets or executing logic across L1 and L2 either requires waiting for final confirmation (7 days for Optimistic Rollup, hours for ZK Rollup) or relying on fast bridges with counterparty risks. “Synchronized composability” allows transactions to “atomically use L1 and L2 states” — meaning cross-layer read/write operations within a single transaction either succeed entirely or roll back completely.
This mechanism involves three types of blocks:
During the window of base blocks, any block builder can create blocks that interact with both L1 and L2 states.
The three block types support periodic synchronization and interaction between L1 and L2
L2 Teams’ Responses
Mainstream L2 teams responded within hours, demonstrating healthy strategic diversity — precisely the effect Vitalik’s “trust spectrum” framework aims for: different teams can choose different positions without pretending to move toward the same endpoint.
Divergent responses from four major Ethereum L2 projects to Vitalik’s “L2 Reset” proposal
This diversity of responses is healthy:
There is no right or wrong in these positions — they are strategic choices targeting different market segments, which is exactly the rationality recognized by the “trust spectrum” framework.
Vitalik’s Recognition of the Economic Realities of L2
One of the key significances of this post is the implicit acknowledgment of L2’s economic attributes. When he mentions that “some L2s, due to ‘regulatory requirements’ (retaining ultimate control), may ‘never surpass first-stage decentralization,’” he is essentially recognizing that L2s are not idealized “branding sharding,” but legitimate economic entities with legal business interests. Sequencer revenue is real, regulatory compliance is real — expecting L2s to abandon these interests for ideological reasons from the start is unrealistic.
L2 retains most fee revenue — this economic reality shapes decentralization incentives
Vitalik’s Future Pathways
Vitalik’s post is not just about “diagnosing problems” but also “solving problems.” He sketches out several concrete directions for L2s that want to maintain value amidst ongoing Layer1 scalability improvements. These are not mandatory requirements but suggested paths for differentiation when “cheaper Ethereum” is no longer the core competitive advantage.
Differentiated value directions for Ethereum L2
Rational honesty in leadership enables adaptive ecosystem development
Summary
In February 2026, Vitalik Buterin published this post, marking a key recalibration of Ethereum’s strategy toward L2. Its core insight is that L2 has evolved into independent platforms with legitimate economic interests, rather than “branding sharding” bearing obligations to Ethereum. Vitalik does not oppose this reality but proposes to recognize differentiation through the “trust spectrum,” strengthen collaboration efficiency via “Native Rollup Infrastructure,” and enable cross-layer interaction through “Synchronized Composability” — thus embracing reality.
Responses from the L2 ecosystem show healthy diversity: Arbitrum emphasizes independence, Base focuses on applications, Linea aligns with the native Rollup direction, and Optimism acknowledges challenges and pushes for improvements. This diversity is the expected outcome of the “trust spectrum” framework: different teams can pursue different strategies without pretending to follow the same path.
For Ethereum, this strategic correction through “acknowledging reality” rather than “defending outdated assumptions” preserves its credibility. Considering the maturity of ZK-EVM technology, related proposals are feasible; strategic proposals also create space for efficient ecosystem evolution. This exemplifies “adaptive leadership” in technology: recognizing environmental changes and proposing new paths rather than stubbornly sticking to rejected strategies.
Having worked in scalability research for a decade and operated a Rollup infrastructure company for four years, I have seen too many leaders refuse to adapt when facts change — often with poor results. Vitalik’s choice is not easy: openly admitting that the 2020 vision needs updating. But it is the right choice. Clinging to market-rejected narratives benefits no one. The direction forward is much clearer than a week ago — and that alone is highly valuable.