Author|Azuma(@azuma_eth)
On December 22, news about the prediction market leader Polymarket sparked widespread attention — Mustafa, a team member of Polymarket, confirmed in the Discord community that Polymarket plans to migrate from Polygon and launch an Ethereum Layer2 network named POLY, which is the project's current top priority.
A Not-So-Surprising "Breakup"
Polymarket's decision to leave Polygon is not entirely unexpected. One is a red-hot application layer representative, the other is a gradually declining old infrastructure; the market heat and value expectations between the two were somewhat mismatched. As Polymarket gradually grows into a new behemoth, Polygon's relatively unstable network performance (the latest outage occurred on December 18) and relatively weak ecosystem have objectively become limitations for the former.
For Polymarket, building its own portal means a win-win choice in both product and economic dimensions.
In terms of product, besides seeking a more stable operating environment, building its own Layer2 network can help Polymarket tailor underlying features according to its platform needs, thereby more flexibly adapting to future upgrades and iterations of the platform.
The more significant meaning, however, lies in the economic aspect. Building its own network means Polymarket can bring the economic activities and peripheral services derived from its platform into its own system, preventing related value from spilling over to external networks, and instead gradually solidifying it into its own systemic advantages.
Explicit and Implicit Economic Contributions
As an application layer, Polymarket's explosive growth once brought substantial direct economic contributions to Polygon. Data history compiled by analyst dash on Dune shows:
- Polymarket's monthly active users this month were 419,309, with a historical total of 1,766,193 users;
- Total transactions this month were 19.63 million, with a historical total of 115 million transactions;
- Total trading volume this month was $1.538 billion, with a historical total of $14.3 billion.
As for how to assess the proportion of Polymarket's contribution to the Polygon ecosystem's economy, Odaily Planet Daily discovered a rather coincidental ratio when compiling data from both.
- First, in terms of deposited funds, Defillama data shows that the total value of positions on the Polymarket platform is currently about $326 million, accounting for about a quarter of Polygon's total network TVL of $1.19 billion;
- Second, regarding gas consumption, Coin Metrics reported last October that transactions related to Polymarket were estimated to consume 25% of Polygon's total network gas;
- Considering this data is relatively old, we checked recent changes. Statistics charted by analyst petertherock on Dune show that in November, transactions related to Polymarket consumed about $216,000 in gas, while Token Terminal statistics show that Polygon's total network gas consumption that month was about $939,000, a ratio also close to a quarter (about 23%).
While this might be a coincidence due to statistical calibers and time windows, similar results across dimensions can serve as an estimated reference for measuring Polymarket's economic significance to Polygon.
Beyond quantifiable metrics like active users, deposited funds, transaction volume, and gas contributions, Polymarket's economic significance to Polygon is also reflected in a series of implicit contributions that are harder to measure directly but equally real.
First is the activation of stablecoin liquidity. All Polymarket transactions are settled in USDC. Its high-frequency, continuous trading behavior objectively significantly increases the circulation demand and usage scenarios for USDC on the Polygon network. Second is the附带价值 (fùdài jiàzhí -附带价值) of retained users'附带行为. Beyond the prediction market itself, these users might also turn to using other products on the Polygon ecosystem, such as DeFi, for convenience, thereby enhancing the overall ecological value of the Polygon network. These contributions are difficult to quantify with specific data but constitute the "real demand" that underlying networks value most and find most scarce.
Why Now? The Answer Isn't Hard to Guess
In fact, judging solely by user scale, data performance, and market presence, Polymarket is already fully confident to stand on its own. This is no longer a question of "should we leave," but rather "when to leave."
The core reason for choosing this particular moment to initiate the migration likely lies in the approaching Polymarket TGE (Token Generation Event). On one hand, once Polymarket completes its token issuance, its governance structure, incentive system, and economic model will become relatively solidified, making the cost and complexity of a subsequent底层迁移 (dǐcéng qiānyí - underlying migration) significantly higher; on the other hand, upgrading from a "single application" to a "application + infrastructure" full-stack system itself implies a change in valuation logic. Building its own Layer2 undoubtedly opens a higher ceiling for Polymarket in terms of narrative and capital.
In summary, Polymarket's departure from Polygon is essentially not just a simple underlying migration, but a microcosm of structural changes in the crypto industry. When top-tier applications begin to possess the ability to independently carry users, traffic, and economic activity, underlying networks that cannot provide additional value will inevitably be "betrayed."
Nothing more, just profit-seeking nature.










