Similar to other L2s, transactions on zero have two costs: the execution cost on L2 and the cost of publishing the aggregated batch to L1. Most existing L2s pass both of these costs on to end users, which means that every transaction has a dynamic gas fee. Even though gas fees have been reduced, they can still become quite high during peak Ethereum activity.

Zero users do not need to worry about gas fees because it is completely covered by a self-sustaining flywheel. This flywheel uses ZERϴ's revenue to pay for gas for users. This system is different from the usual gas subsidy schedule, which has a limit. Zero's revenue generation removes this limit and sets the stage for long-term success. #zerion #ZERO #L2