Original title: "ETH's DeFi Scene Eyes Solana"
Original author: Bankless
Original translation: Rhythm worker, BlockBeats
Solana has consolidated its position as a top blockchain after its rebirth from the ashes of the FTX/Alameda collapse. In the subsequent community-led revival, the sweat of the Solana native team has driven the wheels of progress, but with the steady growth of SOL prices and DeFi indicators within its ecosystem, non-Solana native protocols are also ready to seize this opportunity to take off.
SOL surged from a low of $8 in December 2022 to $210 two months ago, one of the most striking comebacks in cryptocurrencies this cycle, but the wealth creation of the ecosystem is not limited to its native token holders.
Solana ecosystem developers continue to create emotional highs in the market, starting with the PYTH airdrop in November, which distributed tokens on Solana to addresses that interacted with the Pyth oracle on 27 networks (including Ethereum and its L2), and marked a turning point, providing users from other ecosystems with direct economic incentives to support testing Solana.
Soon after, Jito Labs, the Solana native liquid staking protocol, conducted its own airdrop, rewarding eligible wallets that earned more than 100 points through the simple operation of holding jitoSOL deposit receipts, and distributing at least five-digit tokens. The dizzying allotments Jito users received turned Solana into a premier destination for airdrop hunting and catalyzed mass adoption of points-based incentive systems by fledgling protocols within their own ecosystem that have proven highly successful in attracting users and their capital.
While the native protocol laid the foundation for Solana’s mainstream cryptocurrency acceptance, Solana is slowly becoming a “host” for Ethereum developers.
This transition may occur at a snail’s pace, but there is no doubt that migration from Ethereum to Solana will happen as more projects begin to realize the massive on-chain activity within the Solana ecosystem and are eager to take advantage of this opportunity.
Render, a decentralized computing sharing network, fully supported the Solana vision early on and chose to migrate its token to the SPL standard in November. And although MetaMask is often considered a laggard in improving user experience, the project was one of the first Ethereum native applications to introduce Solana compatibility, launching "Snaps" last September, enabling users to choose applications to enter the Solana ecosystem directly from MetaMask. To date, the Snaps integration of Solflare, the Solana native wallet, has attracted more than 500,000 users.
In addition, there are many native lending markets on Solana, but none of them have the same level of time-tested security as Aave, the Ethereum blue-chip lending destination. Seeking to leverage its brand as a competitive advantage for Solana, Aave DAO approved a January temperature check with an 83% pass rate to deploy a minimum viable version of its V3 segregated money market via the Neon EVM, a fully compatible Ethereum development environment for the Solana blockchain.
Last Wednesday, a community-led proposal emerged on the governance forum of GMX, a perpetual contract trading platform for the EVM ecosystem, seeking to build a separate exchange deployment on Solana called GMSOL. GMSOL will exclusively utilize GMX tokens for all value measurement and storage, while implementing a GMX buyback mechanism and allocating a significant portion of fees back to the GMX treasury to build the GMSOL treasury.
In exchange for the dividends of this new Solana-native deployment, the GMX DAO is expected to cover all costs associated with the protocol audit and grant a license to copy and use its front-end code.
In addition to this, there is widespread speculation that two leading Ethereum projects, Ethena and Pendle, will be deployed to the Solana ecosystem in the near future, and both projects have thrived in recent months thanks to the improved interest rate environment in the crypto market.
Applications serve users, not blockchains, and while many blue-chip protocols should have a high standard when considering new deployments, they would be foolish not to flock to environments where users and activity exist. On networks lacking protocols, users will inevitably look for alternatives, putting the market share dominance of existing applications at risk - especially when their chains begin to cede their market share to competitors.
Ethereum and Solana take very different approaches to scaling, with the former opting for sharding the network so that anyone can operate a validator, while the latter prefers a unified state that will work with a single shard. While greater decentralization at the validator level helps maintain the integrity of the Ethereum network, it certainly comes with some drawbacks that make Solana’s alternative vision very attractive in some ways.
At this point, the crypto industry is still in an experimental phase, which means we really don’t know what it will look like in 10 years, but just as investors can prudently diversify their portfolios to reduce risk, applications can also diversify their blockchain deployments to maintain their market share.
Developers seeking the greatest success must acknowledge that there is no inevitable center of the future of finance, and they should deploy their applications accordingly, whether it’s Ethereum, Solana, or even the Monad of EVM+SVM and a bank-operated custodial settlement network. The crypto industry must cross a huge chasm of uncertainty to move from infancy to the final state, achieve true adoption, and bring trillions of dollars of traditional assets on-chain.
Until then, application developers who blindly succumb to chain loyalty will lose money and market share at the table.
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