Original author: @calilyliu

Original translation: zhouzhou, BlockBeats

Editor's Note: This article reveals the EVM bias in the a16z report, ignoring Solana's outstanding performance in transaction fees, NFT, and DeFi markets. Although Solana has ranked among the top in NFT addresses and transaction volume in the past year, the report did not mention DePIN's major innovations such as helium and Hivemapper. These breakthrough projects demonstrate the real-world applications of decentralized networks, especially the thriving development in the Solana ecosystem, which makes people look forward to the future.

The following is the original content (for easier reading and understanding, the original content has been reorganized):

I read the a16z (State of Crypto) report and it was a blast! While I’m primarily focused on areas outside of the EVM, I always appreciate the opportunity to learn about other innovations in the self-custody space. However, I noticed a certain implicit EVM bias in the report. Here are some of my observations:

Related reading: (a16z Annual Crypto Report)

The author frames the world as EVM vs. non-EVM, creating a binary opposition that treats ecosystems and developers who choose not to develop within the EVM as the “other.” For example, the visualization of active addresses is misleading. Solana has 100 million monthly active addresses, surpassing base’s 22 million, yet the chart treats the two as almost equal. A more accurate approach would be to use a single bar chart, with EVM and non-EVM bars distinguished by different colors (if necessary). Additionally, the slides claim that “Base and Solana” have the highest monthly active addresses, but careful readers will notice that NEARProtocol has 31 million active addresses, surpassing Base. Therefore, the title should be changed to “…Solana and Near are the most active.”

Now let's talk about metric selection. Our industry often uses active addresses and total value locked (TVL) as standard benchmarks for the ecosystem. However, I propose a more meaningful way to measure the activity, demand, and overall health of the ecosystem: transaction fees. Transaction fees directly reflect the participation of users in valuable economic activities, their willingness to pay for execution, and the ability of validators to be profitable.

With the introduction of fee markets on Solana, we can now differentiate the economic value of different types of activity within the ecosystem and apply this approach to other ecosystems.

Solana has made significant progress when it comes to transaction fees. Solana’s monthly transaction fee market share has never exceeded 1.5% until December 2023. Since April 2024, this proportion has remained above 10% and reached a peak of 25% in July. When we factor in MEV tips to measure “real economic value” (REV), Solana is closing the gap! A chart from blockworksres highlights the narrowing of the REV gap between Solana and Ethereum.

This is another EVM-centric perspective that touches on the gaming space. Using mgas/s as a metric for evaluating gaming infrastructure excludes Solana and other non-EVM networks, leading to meaningless comparisons and giving us only a partial picture of the blockchain gaming ecosystem.

Another example is related to DeFi, where TVL is an inadequate metric for comparing DeFi activity, especially in key categories such as DEX, derivatives, and bridges, where volume is more relevant. While the report highlights overall DEX volume, it only provides a breakdown of protocols based on TVL, ignoring key aspects of liquidity activity.

TVL tends to favor ecosystems with large reserves but limited liquidity, such as Ethereum. While Solana’s TVL is only 10% of Ethereum’s, its monthly DEX volume in 2024 fluctuates between 50% and occasionally surpassing Ethereum. To accurately reflect on-chain economic activity, it is important to focus on the economic value of transactions, not just the value held. Against this backdrop, ecosystems with greater capital efficiency and superior on-chain performance stand out.

Among the comparable metrics across ecosystems, the report still focuses primarily on Ethereum and EVM L2. It sees the implementation of EIP-4844 as an important milestone in the industry's fee reduction. However, it is worth noting that Solana's transaction costs have also remained low since its launch in March 2020. In addition, in terms of transaction affordability, Solana's median fee has always been lower and more stable than Base.

Despite ranking first in NFT addresses, second in transaction volume, and fourth in unique collectibles over the past year according to nftpulseorg, Solana was once again excluded from this NFT comparison.

The slides mention low transaction costs driving new consumer behaviors, which is best illustrated by the example of drip haus, which has minted 182 million NFTs since March 2023 at a total cost of just 1,600 SOL (at a SOL price of $150, that’s just $0.001 per NFT), as noted by ledger top.

The lack of DePIN is very obvious. Helium is revolutionizing cellular networks and currently has more than 1 million active hotspots in 182 countries. Hivemapper uses decentralized networks for global mapping and has recorded more than 7.5 million kilometers of street data in more than 50 countries. Rendernetwork provides decentralized GPU rendering services, providing key computing power for industries such as games and artificial intelligence. This is an upgraded version of SETI@home, showing practical application value.

More importantly, most of these innovations are happening in the Solana rather than the EVM ecosystem, so is this why DePIN is not mentioned at all in the report?

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