Growth in Layer 2 active users can directly impact Ethereum’s long-term valuation. As L2 networks scale Ethereum by lowering fees and improving throughput, more users and developers enter the ecosystem, increasing demand for ETH as gas collateral. Higher transaction volumes on L2s still rely on Ethereum for security and settlement, which ties usage back to ETH. Additionally, greater L2 adoption may lead to increased staking demand, reducing circulating supply. However, the effect on valuation depends on whether L2 growth translates into sustainable fee revenue and ecosystem stickiness. If adoption continues rising, it strengthens ETH’s role as the settlement layer, positively supporting its long-term value proposition.
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The vesting schedule determines when and how team or investor tokens are unlocked. A gradual, long-term release reduces sudden selling pressure and aligns team incentives with project growth. Investors should check for cliffs, linear unlocks, and whether vesting is tied to milestones.
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Optimizing gas for airdrops involves strategic timing, batching transactions, and using gas-efficient smart contract calls. Avoid peak network hours to reduce fees and leverage Layer-2 solutions when supported. Users can pre-calculate maximum acceptable gas prices and set limits in wallet interfaces. Splitting large claims into smaller transactions or using automated tools to queue claims can minimize overall cost. Monitoring gas trackers such as GasNow or Ethereum Gas Station helps identify low-cost windows. Additionally, some protocols provide bulk claim functions or meta-transactions that reduce per-transaction fees. Careful planning balances successful claim probability with cost-effectiveness.
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