Author: Joseph Chalom
Compiled by: Jiahuan, ChainCatcher
I just returned from Asia, where I spent time with Ethereum developers and ecosystem leaders. Special thanks to Nonce Classic, Four Pillars, and DSRV in Seoul, our friends at SNZ, and the recently opened Ethereum Community Center in Hong Kong. This center is Asia's first long-term operational physical Ethereum community space, supported by the Ethereum Foundation.
What impressed me most was not just the vibrancy, but also the rigor and ambition of the builders there. The high-caliber projects, experimental spirit, and long-term thinking emerging from the global Ethereum ecosystem were truly inspiring.
This also brought a number to life: data from Electric Capital shows that the total number of historical Ethereum developers has now exceeded one million, with 1,012,824 individuals having contributed to the ecosystem. No other ecosystem in crypto can compare.
A Milestone Worth Noting
One million is a round number, and round numbers can sometimes feel hollow. But this one is not. It represents the largest pool of technical talent ever assembled around an open, permissionless blockchain network. More importantly, this talent pool continues to deepen and widen.
Of this one million developers, approximately 232,000 remained active over the past twelve months.
Why Ethereum: The Real Important Question
For years, crypto discussions have revolved around speed, fees, and throughput. Every new chain claims to be "faster than Ethereum." But the core question in crypto has never been which chain is the fastest, but another:
"Where will the most skilled builders choose to build long-term?"
On this issue, Ethereum maintains a clear advantage. This advantage is not just technical; it's institutional, cultural, economic, and structural—the result of a decade of accumulation of developers, infrastructure, standards, tools, liquidity, research, applications, and social coordination that no other ecosystem can replicate.
Ethereum has become the default operating system for programmable finance and internet-native capital formation.
What Are These Million Builders Constructing, and Why It Reinforces the Moat
The significance of these million builders lies in what they are doing *right now*. The current focus is on the hardest, highest-stakes problems in the industry: core protocol scalability, privacy, quantum resistance, and the autonomous agent systems that will run on top of it.
Glamsterdam Upgrade: Innovating Without Breaking Core Principles. The Glamsterdam upgrade, expected in 2026, demonstrates how Ethereum progresses while holding firm to its core values. Core changes include enshrined proposer-builder separation (ePBS) and block-level access lists (BALs), unlocking parallel execution and higher throughput, and the potential to raise the gas limit, significantly increasing Layer 1 capacity.
Scaling for future demand while defending credibly neutral trust, security, and MEV fairness is itself an evolving moat.
Synchronous Composability: Making Many Rollups Feel Like One Chain. Composability has always been Ethereum's superpower; the next leap is extending it to Layer 2. Native Rollups and Based Rollups, combined with synchronous composability, address this. A contract on one rollup can call a contract on Mainnet or another rollup in a single atomic transaction—no bridges, no waiting.
Linea, Ethereum Economic Zone, Gnosis, Zisk, and the Ethereum Foundation are collaborating to combine this design with real-time proofs. The result is that dozens of rollups no longer operate like isolated networks but begin to function like a unified chain. This is a direct response to fragmentation criticism.
Quantum Resistance: Ethereum's Most Obvious Lead. No other mainstream ecosystem is more prepared for the post-quantum era. The "Lean Ethereum" roadmap, the Ethereum Foundation's Post-Quantum Security team established in early 2026, pq.ethereum.org, and over a dozen client teams already running weekly post-quantum interoperability devnets constitute a coordinated, open-source migration targeting completion around 2029.
When quantum risk becomes a reality, institutions hosting trillions of dollars in assets will care about one thing: which chain was prepared earliest and most thoroughly.
Moat Beyond Developers: Composability, Standards, and Trust
The concentration of developer talent compounds because of how Ethereum itself is built. Its deepest network effect is not liquidity, but the depth of composability: applications function like interoperable financial Lego bricks.
Lending, stablecoins, exchanges, wallets, tokenized assets, oracles, and Layer 2 rollups all interact through shared standards; developers never have to start from scratch. The EVM is crypto's application layer, and Solidity skills are transferable to Base, Arbitrum, Optimism, Polygon, zkSync, Scroll, Linea, and hundreds of other networks.
Learning the Ethereum tech stack maximizes optionality, which drives a flywheel effect: more developers, more tools, more liquidity, more institutions, which in turn attracts more developers to build composable protocols and assets. Liquidity begets liquidity, composability begets composability.
Moreover, Ethereum dominates where real value settles, not just where the loudest noise is made:
Three forces reinforce this lead.
Credible Neutrality: Ethereum is secured by over 900,000 validators, while Solana has around 800. Large institutions place immense value on this level of decentralization and platform neutrality.
Modularity: Rollups like Base, Arbitrum, and Optimism are not fragmenting Ethereum; they are expanding it into an increasingly interconnected modular internet economy that inherits Mainnet's security.
Culture: Ethereum attracts top researchers, cryptographers, and EIP standards authors far beyond any other ecosystem, setting the direction for the entire industry. This is perhaps the hardest advantage for other ecosystems to replicate.
There is Only One Ethereum
There's a fundamental difference between generating on-chain activity and being the long-term coordination layer for internet-native finance. The latter means being the layer trusted by the world's largest financial institutions.
Ethereum has firmly captured the mindshare of major asset holders, institutions that value trust, security, and liquidity above all. I saw this firsthand from the front row during my tenure at BlackRock.
In technology markets, ecosystems consolidate over time around standards, liquidity, and developer attention. This is Ethereum's moat.
After meeting these developers, builders, and ecosystem leaders in Seoul and Hong Kong, I am more convinced than ever of Ethereum's competitive advantage. I met the talent building the next generation of financial infrastructure—the founders and architects of our industry's future and agentic finance. These are the people and teams that will change the world.
Ethereum's future is happening now.










