Getting your head around gas fees on Layer 2 solutions? It's actually pretty straightforward once you break it down.
The computation happening on-chain gets tracked separately from what it costs to bundle that data back to Ethereum's mainnet. Both costs shift in real-time depending on how busy the network gets.
For reference, both Arbitrum One and Nova cap out at 7 million gas per second. That's the throughput ceiling these chains operate under.
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SmartMoneyWallet
· 12-06 19:59
A ceiling of 7 million gas/second? What a joke, these project teams rely on just this level of throughput to make a living, and yet they still dare to sell the story of "real scalability" to retail investors.
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BankruptcyArtist
· 12-06 19:58
The gas fees on layer 2 sound simple, but in actual use, it still depends on network congestion, which really changes constantly.
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DAOplomacy
· 12-06 19:57
so the throughput ceiling is just another way of saying "we hit the wall and stopped pretending otherwise" yeah?
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SatsStacking
· 12-06 19:52
L2 gas fees actually aren't that mysterious—it's clear once you break them down.
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WagmiWarrior
· 12-06 19:49
Layer2 gas is basically just like that; to put it simply, it's just split into two parts of cost.
Getting your head around gas fees on Layer 2 solutions? It's actually pretty straightforward once you break it down.
The computation happening on-chain gets tracked separately from what it costs to bundle that data back to Ethereum's mainnet. Both costs shift in real-time depending on how busy the network gets.
For reference, both Arbitrum One and Nova cap out at 7 million gas per second. That's the throughput ceiling these chains operate under.