Over the past year, the crypto industry has attracted users on an exponential scale, with monthly active addresses tripling from 70 million in 2023 to over 220 million in 2024. With over 300 channels listed , the ecosystem should be able to meet user needs. all types of users in a sustainable way. However, in this sprawling landscape, the majority of activity and liquidity is locked into multiple Ethereum Layer 2s.
In its current state, Ethereum is reminiscent of Europe in the early 1500s, which saw breakthroughs such as printing and advanced shipbuilding that improved resource management. Today, Ethereum’s thriving DeFi ecosystem is equipped with primitives such as lending and borrowing, staking, and retaking. However, much like Europe’s challenges with scarce and overused resources, Ethereum faces obstacles in making other assets useful in its own country – its layer 1.
The current blockchain ecosystem therefore remains frustrating and fragmented. Although chain abstraction is a trend with many projects underway, solutions like Intents typically involve sequencers that favor large players when executing orders between blockchains, leading to centralization. Additionally, no additional utilities are created for users, as most solutions focus on simply exchanging assets.
Despite an impressive technological foundation, we have created a landscape in which digital assets are constrained rather than empowered. Major blockchain resources such as Ethereum are underutilized and limited by rigid architectural boundaries.
For true interoperability to exist, in 2025, we need to take a step back and re-approach blockchain modularity from a new perspective.
The illusion of modularity
The common analogy between blockchain and “Lego blocks” oversimplifies a complex technological landscape. Unlike uniform building blocks, blockchain components are complex systems with specific dependencies and complex interoperability challenges.
Let’s take a practical scenario: moving an asset between different blockchain networks should be simple. Yet current solutions such as basic token exchanges offer minimal functionality. Technology requires a more nuanced and sophisticated approach.
Emerging technologies are changing this narrative. General messaging alternatives and advances in transaction finality are creating a more organic and unified ecosystem. The ultimate goal is not just to connect disparate elements, but to create an infrastructure where different networks can collaborate effortlessly.
2025: The year of utility and accessibility
Looking ahead to 2025, I anticipate a two-pronged approach to solving current and future fragmentation problems. In order to attract users and build a sustainable user base, the infrastructure must blend into the background so that users can focus on the application itself without getting caught up in the technology that underlies it.
Currently, users are unable to optimally utilize their assets due to complex transition solutions that discourage them from easily moving their assets from one chain to another. Instead, we need to provide users with a way to maximize their returns while contributing to the ecosystem. This can be achieved by giving freedom to token holders to move their assets across chains without bridging, through solutions such as restocking. As restoration expands beyond Ethereum, connecting multiple Layer 1 and Layer 2 networks, this is a growing area of interest for users.
Instead of fragmenting the ecosystem with new competing blockchains, projects will focus on improving and interconnecting existing infrastructure. This approach will breathe new life into currently dormant channels, energize business and create real value.
In addition to improvements to the underlying infrastructure, user experience will also take center stage. We will see applications that integrate blockchain functionality so seamlessly that users will interact with sophisticated technology without ever recognizing its complexity. Infrastructure will become invisible: a powerful backend that complements seamless frontend experiences without technical friction.
Create a global market
Although 2024 marked significant industry acceptance, as evidenced by increased investment in assets like bitcoin, true adoption requires an inclusive vision. We must not just build financial instruments, but create a global market where everything communicates with everything else, allowing every asset to reach its maximum potential.
The future of blockchain does not depend on individual chains competing for supremacy. It’s about creating a collaborative, frictionless infrastructure that allows users to access economic potential, building the future of how money and value can work.