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Home > ICO > Axie Infinity’s Gaming Sidechain Is Bigger Than Many Major L1s by Volume: Nansen Report

Axie Infinity’s Gaming Sidechain Is Bigger Than Many Major L1s by Volume: Nansen Report

A farming simulator clogged a popular blockchain for days on end last week. Now a new research report from blockchain analytics firm Nansen sheds light on a possible solution.

Ronin, a layer 2 from Axie Infinity developer Sky Mavis devoted solely to the game, processed 560% more total transactions than Ethereum at its peak in November, the report found. And while that figure has since retreated, the sidechain is still processing more than up-and-coming networks like Fantom and Avalanche.

Nansen data journalist Martin Lee said the report offers a glimpse into a particular multi-chain future, one where many layer 1s focus on specific use cases out of necessity.

“A lot of blockchains, whether they like it or not, will specialize. Even though creators might not plan for it, developers will force them to go a separate way, purely because of the trade-offs different chains have – developers will be attractive to developers for specific reasons,” he said.

Axie’s reach

Axie Infinity – the crown jewel of crypto’s still-nascent “play-to-earn” sector – currently boasts 2.8 million daily active users, and as a result, Ronin is processing 40% more transactions than Avalanche, one of the most popular layer 1s by transaction volume.

Lee noted that this figure was achieved in spite of typhoon season disrupting player activities in the Philippines, home to nearly half of Axie’s user base.

The vast majority of the transactions are worth less than $1,000, and fees are currently free on the chain for up to 100 transactions.

“What stood out to me was the sheer number of transactions on the chain relative to other layer 1 solutions like Avalanche or Fantom,” said Lee. “That alone is a signal for other, similar layer 2s to be created. If one single game demands so much out of the underlying blockchain, what happens when a chain is home to multiple games?”

Polygon’s proof-of-stake chain recently got a taste of what game-related congestions can look like. Transaction costs, which can often be fractions of a cent, ran as high as $0.50, and users griped about failed transactions for days – all because a simple farming simulator game clogged the chain with bot activity.

Read more: Polygon Under Accidental Attack From Swarm of Sunflower Farmers

Additionally, Ronin users are engaging with advanced DeFi functionality by depositing into decentralized exchange liquidity pools and Axie’s staking module, despite having lower account balances – a trend that would be unlikely to play out on most layer 1s due to fees.

“These users would be priced out of using Uniswap, for example,” said Lee.

Original Source