Some time ago, I couldn't help but laugh when I came across this tweet by Jon Charbonneau. When Base is called "the white person's BNB Chain," what exactly is being implied behind this jest?
In Haseeb's article "Blockchains are cities," Ethereum and Solana were compared to New York and Los Angeles respectively. If we adopt the same analogy:
BNB Chain is a port city that never sleeps, carrying the massive traffic from Binance. Cargo ships come and go, the market is noisy, with street stalls and trading platforms side by side. Here, it doesn't matter where you come from, only whether you can participate immediately. Gas fees are low, the pace is fast, new projects launch daily—some make money, others leave. You don't need to understand urban planning or subscribe to any particular ideology—just know where the action is and where the opportunities lie to survive.
Base, on the other hand, is a new city under rapid construction, inheriting Ethereum's values. Roads are still being paved, communities are forming, and rules are being debated. It lacks the hustle and bustle of a port, but it attracts a large number of engineers, creators, and institutions to settle early. They are not in a hurry to make quick money but are instead thinking: if truly mass-market on-chain applications emerge in the next decade, where should they be born?
The same cryptographic world is diverging into different cities, different residents, and different lifestyles.
Understanding the differences between these two cities is perhaps far more important than debating which chain is better.
Two Parallel Cultures
If we place BNB Chain and Base on the same map, they appear to be competing; but if we shift our perspective to users and culture, we find that this is more like the parallel growth of two worldviews.
BNB Chain and Base essentially represent two different user structures, traffic sources, and growth logics. The former is rooted in Asian and emerging markets, while the latter has grown within the Western developer community. Rather than simply understanding them as competitors, it is more accurate to say they are the result of natural stratification among crypto users.
The user profile of BNB Chain is very clear.
A large number of users come from Binance's long-accumulated retail base, many of whom are using on-chain products for the first time. They are primarily distributed in emerging markets such as Southeast Asia and the Middle East, and are not fixated on "purity of decentralization." Their focus is extremely pragmatic:
Are gas fees low enough? Are transactions fast enough? Can I participate in hot projects as soon as they launch?
For these users, the chain is not an ideology but a tool. As long as it is user-friendly, cheap, and profitable, centralization or semi-centralization is not a primary concern. This also explains why BNB Chain's ecosystem consistently revolves around efficiency, scale, and application density.
Base's user base is different.
They are more often Coinbase users and the "overflow crowd" from the Ethereum ecosystem, with a deeper understanding of blockchain and a greater willingness to discuss underlying design issues. These users care about Base's relationship with the Ethereum mainnet, the degree of decentralization, the technical roadmap of L2, and even the orthodoxy of culture and narrative.
In their eyes, blockchain is not just a tool for completing transactions but also a space for self-expression, community building, and creative experimentation.
It is this difference in user attributes that profoundly shapes the distinct cultural genes of the two chains.
BNB Chain has chosen a path closer to Web2's consumer internet: integrating ecosystems, bringing as many functions, applications, and scenarios into the same system as possible. For emerging market users, this "all-in-one" model significantly reduces decision-making costs and learning barriers, making the on-chain experience more akin to the internet products they are familiar with.
Base, on the other hand, resembles an open experimental field, willing to reserve sufficient space and patience for developers and creators. It is not in a hurry to cover all scenarios but prioritizes allowing the right culture and tools to settle first.
From this perspective, BNB Chain and Base are not competing for the same users but growing in the soil each is best suited for.
They are not opposites but two reasonable answers given by the same industry under different cultural backgrounds.
Similarities and Differences in Vertical Integration
Over the past few years, major trading platforms have almost simultaneously done one thing:
No longer content with being just a "platform for matching trades," they have extended their business reach to public chains and wallets, among other deeper layers.
The underlying business logic is actually quite straightforward.
If a trading platform can only engage with users at the single moment of "buying" and "selling," then user value is discrete and temporary; but once the trading platform controls the chain and wallet, the user's value path is extended, becoming a multi-point contact, repeatedly cyclical lifecycle.
When users complete funding, on-chain activities, dApp usage, participation in new projects, and return to the trading platform for transactions within the same system, the trading platform is no longer just an endpoint but the start and end of the entire on-chain journey. Each additional step increases the user's switching cost and enhances stickiness. This is the real result vertical integration aims for: turning one-time transactional relationships into long-term retention relationships.
More critically, this structure can directly amplify liquidity and trading volume.
New tokens and projects continuously emerging on-chain essentially represent a "continuous ability to create new assets." And when a trading platform controls both the chain and the authority to list and price contracts, this on-chain "coin-minting ability" can be seamlessly converted into spot trading pairs and derivative targets, ultimately沉淀 as continuous fee income.
From this perspective, BNB Chain and Base are both typical examples of trading platforms' vertical integration strategies, but they each amplify different strengths.
BNB Chain's core competitiveness comes from Binance itself.
As a trading platform with a global user base and trading depth in the first tier, Binance has an extremely strong ability for instant traffic distribution. New projects launching on BNB Chain do not need to educate the market from scratch and rarely go through prolonged cold-start periods. A large number of users can directly transfer from the trading platform to the chain to participate and quickly return to the trading platform after completing interactions. This "frictionless back-and-forth" path makes BNB Chain more like a high-speed channel for applications.
Behind this model lies Binance's strong trading platform DNA:
Quick response to market trends, deep understanding of user behavior, and highly mature traffic operations. BNB Chain does not pursue slow, meticulous ecosystem building but is more adept at pushing a new narrative to its maximum scale in a short time.
Base's vertical integration path is distinctly different.
It does not attempt to replicate BNB Chain's speed but instead leverages the compliance brand, fiat on-ramps, and institutional credibility that Coinbase has long accumulated in the U.S. market to build a completely different trust structure. As the first U.S.-listed cryptocurrency trading platform, Coinbase's experience surviving within regulatory frameworks is itself a scarce resource. This also gives Base a natural "institution-friendly" label.
For institutional investors, enterprise applications, and developers sensitive to compliance boundaries, Base provides an environment where they can experiment with confidence and build for the long term. Coupled with Coinbase's long-term deep involvement in the Ethereum ecosystem and continuous investment in developer tools and infrastructure, Base has gradually developed a明显的 "builder-friendly" culture.
If BNB Chain is more like an efficient commercialization testing ground, then Base is closer to a future-oriented infrastructure platform.
The former excels at quickly turning traffic into scale, while the latter excels at slowly沉淀 trust into an ecosystem.
From the trading platform's perspective, these two paths are not right or wrong; they simply amplify their respective strengths.
And it is this difference that makes BNB Chain and Base the most noteworthy and representative samples of current trading platform vertical integration.
Wallet—The Final Battle?
Judging from community feedback, the Binance Web3 Wallet is not very popular, but it undeniably leads in first-tier traffic. For many Binance users, the first time they use the Web3 Wallet often comes from a very specific scenario: wanting to participate in a new launch, wanting to farm airdrops, or wanting to join a hot project as soon as possible, but it's not yet available on the trading platform.
Thus, the trading platform's built-in wallet appears.
You don't need a seed phrase, don't need to understand complex account models, and may not even clearly realize, "I am now using an independent wallet."
The entire process—from funding and swapping to cross-chain, authorization, and interaction—is an extremely smooth and effortless path.
Behind this is Binance's consistent strength: simplifying complex financial operations.
This is also why the Binance Web3 Wallet naturally fits the ecological characteristics of BNB Chain—
Hot trends emerge quickly, project density is high, and user behavior is highly concentrated in short cycles.
In a 2025 on-chain statistic, Binance Wallet's daily trading volume once reached approximately $92.6 million, accounting for nearly 57.3% of the decentralized wallet trading market share, a number even exceeding the sum of all independent wallets.
Users don't need to remember seed phrases or leave the existing APP to complete cross-chain, swaps, mining, or airdrop participation. This frictionless experience is something many independent wallets cannot easily replicate.
The Coinbase Wallet (Base App) has a completely different气质. According to the latest market statistics, the Base App's user base has reached approximately 11 million, ranking among the top in the global self-custody wallet ecosystem.
It was designed from the start to be a product that can exist independently of the trading platform. This also results in a significantly higher learning curve for the Base App.
But once this process is completed, the user's psychological state shifts: this is "my wallet," not "I'm using Coinbase." This design is highly consistent with Base's overall direction. Base is not in a hurry to quickly guide all users to a particular killer app but is more concerned with whether people are willing to stay long-term, using the same wallet and the same address to repeatedly build their on-chain identity.
Thus, you will see that Base App power users are often also: early adopters of applications on Base, core participants in NFTs, social, and creator tools, and people more sensitive to product experience and long-term narratives.
Within the Binance Web3 Wallet system, it is easier for applications with strong financial attributes, short cycles, high-frequency interactions, and the ability to quickly承接 trading platform traffic to emerge. In the Base App + Base system, it is easier for products focused on user retention, sensitive to UX, community, and long-term relationships, not急于变现 but willing to gradually accumulate real users to grow.
Conclusion
The author believes that the industry is most likely to see two types of ecosystems in the future:
1. CEX-led super ecosystems (Binance, Coinbase)
2. Community-led large public infrastructures (Ethereum, Solana)
BNB Chain and Base will not replace each other.
The global crypto user base is not homogeneous. Emerging markets need low barriers, high efficiency, and strong applications; Western markets need compliance, developer friendliness, and cultural认同. These two demands will not disappear in the foreseeable future.
A more realistic scenario is that infrastructure such as wallets, cross-chain, and account abstraction will gradually smooth out usage differences; users will no longer "belong to only one chain" but will flow between different ecosystems.
From this perspective, BNB Chain and Base are more like two nodes in the same system: one responsible for pushing Web3 to a larger scale, the other for pushing Web3 to a more mature form.
If early public chain competition was like fighting for the "only operating system," then current competition is closer to "different platforms jointly building the internet ecosystem."
The real winners may not be a particular chain itself, but those applications and teams that can understand both ecosystems and freely switch between them.














