According to Cointelegraph, crypto derivatives trading platform Vega Protocol has proposed retiring its blockchain and ceasing official support for its native token VEGA. In an August 30 blog post, Vega announced the proposal aims to focus on the development and promotion of the protocol’s software and introduce a new project called Nebula. Nebula is described as a full retail decentralized exchange (DEX) with committed liquidity, built on the Vega protocol. VEGA token holders are being offered the opportunity to swap their tokens for the new NEB token associated with Nebula.

The official Vega Governance proposal outlines actions including suspending trading, redistributing the on-chain treasury to stakers, and providing guaranteed USDT incentives to validators to maintain network operations for the next two months, allowing users to withdraw funds from the Vega DEX. After this period, it will be up to current or potential validators to decide whether to continue running nodes, as there will be no trading and no VEGA issuance for rewards, likely leading to the cessation of the alpha mainnet chain. The proposal emphasizes that this will not impact the long-term functionality of the Vega Protocol.

At the time of publication, the proposal has garnered strong support, with 1.7 million tokens voting in favor and only 200 tokens against. The proposal needs a 2.5% participation threshold to pass, with voting closing on September 6. However, the proposal has faced criticism from some crypto commentators, including pseudonymous commentator Spreek, who claimed that the new NEB token could dilute existing holders’ allocation by up to five times. Cointelegraph reached out to Vega Protocol for comment but did not receive a response by the time of publication.

Following the announcement, the price of the VEGA token has dropped significantly, falling over 17% in the last 24 hours and over 64% in the past month. VEGA is currently trading at $0.06, marking a 95% loss over the past year. Vega first introduced its whitepaper in 2018, positioning itself as a trading-focused blockchain designed for high volumes of derivatives trading with high scalability and quick settlement times. In 2019, Vega raised $5 million in seed funding led by Pantera Capital and secured an additional $43 million in a community funding round in 2021. Currently, Vega holds $424,000 in total value-locked (TVL) on its protocol, significantly lower than rival decentralized trading platforms such as Hyperliquid and dYdX, which have TVLs of $541 million and $395 million, respectively, according to DeFiLlama data.