Sonic Co-Founder Calls L2 Appchains “Illogical” for Developers

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Andrei Cronje, co-founder and architect of Sonic (formerly Fantom), has warned developers against using appchains — customized Layer 2 (L2) networks designed specifically for certain decentralized applications (dApps).

The founder of the DeFi project yEarn Finance argued that such protocols are “illogical” and listed several problems that make them less attractive for developers. According to Cronje, these networks lack the necessary infrastructure to launch stablecoins, oracles, and institutional solutions. The costs of these services are often underestimated.

Cronje emphasized that the Sonic team has already spent $14 million in 2024 on services related to L2 appchains, such as explorers, exchange access, tool stacks, cross-chain bridges, and compliance solutions.

Support from Other Developers

Cronje’s viewpoint is backed by Gabriel Garrett Fu of Mantle.

“Many don’t understand that infrastructure is the most expensive recurring cost for any L2 protocol,” stated Fu, the team lead for DeFi development.

Cronje also noted that many providers refuse to work with L2 appchains or deprioritize them, leading to wasted time.

He also pointed out other drawbacks of L2 appchains:

  • Lack of technical support and community.
  • Liquidity fragmentation through bridges.
  • Centralization and vulnerability to attacks.
  • The necessity to build a project alone without network effects.

Response from Other Experts

Mark Buaron, CEO of Polygon Labs, disagreed with Cronje’s arguments, stating that most of these issues can be solved with Polygon’s AggLayer for liquidity management and community building.

Hilmar Orta, founder of Gelato Network, also disagreed with Cronje, mentioning that most challenges can be solved, except the problem of building a project alone, as applications compete with each other.

The Future of L2 Solutions

In October 2024, Uniswap, the largest decentralized exchange (DEX) by trading volume, announced the launch of its own L2 solution. Analysts estimate that this could bring an additional $500 million in yearly revenue to the platform and UNI token holders.