Does Switching Chains to Re-entrepreneur Really "Change One's Destiny"?

链捕手Published on 2026-07-10Last updated on 2026-07-10

Abstract

Amid a recent wave of blockchain migrations, several established projects, including Sophon, Moonbeam, and Secret Network, are moving to new ecosystems like Base and Arbitrum. Unlike past migrations driven by hype or security, these moves are often accompanied by strategic pivots, such as shifting focus to consumer applications, AI, or privacy-AI integration, effectively representing a "re-startup" attempt. However, the crypto community has reacted cautiously. Following Secret Network's announcement of its planned migration to Arbitrum, its token price plummeted over 30% in 24 hours. While migrating to more cost-efficient, higher-traffic, or technologically suitable chains can be a pragmatic choice, history shows that such moves rarely guarantee success. Examples like the y00ts NFT project, which moved from Solana to Polygon and then to Ethereum, or Synthetix’s retreat from a multi-chain strategy, illustrate the challenges and often underwhelming results. The current market environment, characterized by greater user rationality and the partial validation of past narratives, makes a successful "pivot via migration" even more difficult. Simultaneously, destination chains themselves face challenges in demonstrating sustainable user adoption beyond merely attracting migrating projects. Ultimately, the competition is shifting from which chain can onboard the most projects to which can genuinely foster real-world application and retain users.

Authors: momo, ChianCatcher

Recently, several projects have successively announced migrations to new public chain ecosystems. Unlike the previous chain-switching driven by hype or simple security reasons, this time project teams are also undergoing business pivots alongside the migration, essentially restarting their ventures in a new environment.

However, the crypto community doesn't seem optimistic about projects switching chains to re-entrepreneur. After Secret Network announced plans to migrate to Arbitrum, its token plunged over 30% within 24 hours.

Base and Arbitrum Become New Docking Ports for Established Projects to "Re-entrepreneur"

In this wave of public chain migration, Base and Arbitrum have become destinations for many established projects seeking new growth opportunities.

Sophon was once an L2 project within the ZKsync ecosystem, aiming to build consumer-grade blockchain infrastructure using zero-knowledge proofs. In June, Sophon announced the shutdown of its own chain, migration to Base, and a strategic shift towards consumer applications, launching Pyre among others. The official reason was straightforward: maintaining a blockchain costs over $3 million annually; migration could cut roughly $3 million in operational costs each year.

Moonbeam was an early and important EVM-compatible parachain in Polkadot, serving as a key gateway connecting Ethereum applications to the Polkadot ecosystem. In July, Moonbeam announced the migration of GLMR to Base, adjusting its development direction towards a decentralized AI agent communication and settlement network.

On the other hand, Secret Network, a prominent privacy project in the Cosmos ecosystem, announced plans to migrate to Arbitrum, converting SCRT to an ERC-20 token, and exploring the integration of privacy infrastructure with AI and other directions. Following Secret Network's announcement, its token plummeted 30% within 24 hours, reflecting the crypto community's pessimism.

It's worth noting that these migrating projects share a commonality: they were all public chain networks. Post-migration, they are all seeking application scenarios and market narratives that combine AI with real-world consumption.

Arbitrum's official welcome of Secret Network's migration is also noteworthy. With the crypto space currently lacking the phenomenally innovative tracks and projects seen in previous bull markets, attracting mature projects from other chains might be a pragmatic move.

Furthermore, Polkadot and Cosmos, once dubbed the "Cross-Chain Duo," have fallen silent, becoming key sources for project emigration.

The crypto community jests, "Seeing the word Polkadot really feels like a lifetime ago. The last time I heard about it was with Manta's departure; the next time I hear about it, it's another top project leaving." Regarding Cosmos, projects like Noble, Nillion, and Akash have previously adjusted their directions, some migrating to Ethereum, others turning to Solana or independent EVM ecosystems.

Can Switching Chains to Re-entrepreneur Really Change One's Destiny?

Chain-switching isn't new. For many projects, even with the costs of technical ecosystem migration, moving to a chain better suited for technical development needs, with more ecosystem traffic or greater security, is a pragmatic choice.

However, chain-switching often serves best as the icing on the cake; truly "changing one's destiny" is likely much more difficult. Cases of projects switching chains with lackluster results, repeatedly migrating, or even returning to their original chains are not rare. In late 2022, the y00ts NFT project announced a move from Solana to Polygon, even securing a multi-million dollar grant. Yet, within just a few months, y00ts regretted the decision, returned the grant in mid-2023, and announced migration from Polygon back to the Ethereum mainnet. While the real reason wasn't disclosed, the switch clearly didn't meet expectations. Synthetix deployed across multiple L2s before ultimately pulling back to the mainnet, as the multi-chain strategy increased complexity without delivering the anticipated synergy.

Moreover, in the current crypto market environment, the difficulty of "changing one's destiny" through a chain switch might be greater. In early bull markets, there were airdrops, narrative dividends, and user enthusiasm, making it easier for projects to chase hype and secure subsidies. But now, as crypto increasingly integrates with traditional finance and several narratives have been preliminarily disproven, users have become more rational.

Public chains themselves face significant challenges. Ethereum has undergone large-scale layoffs and downsizing, frequently facing bearish sentiment. Shortly after the prediction market project world defected to Solana, it abandoned Solana for the newly launched Roobinhood Chain upon its launch, a microcosm of the challenges facing traditional crypto public chains.

Compared to project teams trying to find a new lease on life by switching chains, the path for public chains to achieve growth by attracting external "has-been" projects is not smooth either. Today's competition is no longer just about "who can take on more projects," but about who genuinely has application scenarios and can truly retain users.

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Related Questions

QAccording to the article, what are two notable public chains that have become destinations for older projects seeking a 'second startup' through migration?

ABase and Arbitrum.

QWhat major reason did the project Sophon give for shutting down its own chain and migrating to Base?

ATo reduce operational costs, as maintaining its own blockchain cost over $3 million annually.

QWhat was the immediate market reaction (within 24 hours) to Secret Network's announcement of its planned migration to Arbitrum?

AIts token price plummeted by over 30%.

QThe article mentions that some projects have migrated back to their original chains after unsuccessful moves. Which NFT project is cited as an example of this?

AThe y00ts NFT project.

QBeyond just changing technical infrastructure, what new narrative or focus are many of the migrating projects pursuing, according to the article?

AThey are seeking new narratives focused on AI and real-world consumer applications.

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Recent months have witnessed a wave of established blockchain projects migrating to new public chains, notably Base and Arbitrum, coupled with strategic pivots in their business models—essentially "re-starting" elsewhere. Examples include Sophon (moving from ZKsync to Base to cut $3M+ annual costs and focus on consumer apps), Moonbeam (shifting from Polkadot to Base to pursue decentralized AI), and Secret Network (planning a move from Cosmos to Arbitrum to explore privacy-AI integrations, though its token price plunged 30% post-announcement). A common thread is that these migrating projects are primarily layer-1 or layer-2 chains now seeking relevance in AI and real-world consumer applications. This trend highlights the relative stagnation of ecosystems like Polkadot and Cosmos, which are seeing significant outflows. However, the community remains skeptical about whether such chain-hopping truly enables a turnaround. Historical cases like y00ts NFTs (which moved from Solana to Polygon and back to Ethereum) and Synthetix (which retreated from a multi-chain strategy) show that migration often fails to deliver expected benefits and can add complexity. In today's more rational market, devoid of easy narrative or airdrop红利, simply changing chains is unlikely to be a silver bullet. For both migrating projects and destination chains, the real challenge lies not in attracting projects but in developing actual use cases that retain users.

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