In the second half of 2025, the competitive focus within the EVM ecosystem is undergoing subtle yet crucial changes. The latest on-chain data indicates that the battle for EVM dominance is no longer primarily driven by token prices or short-term narratives, but is gradually shifting towards genuine user engagement and retention capabilities. Against this backdrop, BNB Chain has performed particularly well, quietly establishing an advantage as it moves toward 2026.
According to data disclosed by Nansen on the X platform, since July 2025, BNB Chain has consistently led other EVM chains in active addresses and has maintained high levels over the long term. Unlike many EVM chains that rely on episodic surges, BNB Chain exhibits stable and continuous usage characteristics, making it more akin to “everyday infrastructure” rather than a speculative tool.
The core driver of this trend stems from retail users’ high-frequency usage, low transaction fees, and deep integration with mainstream entry points like Gate, which align user pathways. This synergy lowers the barrier for new users and increases the repeat rate of on-chain interactions. In contrast, while Base experienced a rapid rise in activity, it lacked sustainability, with transaction behaviors more driven by incentives rather than genuine demand.
Overall, Ethereum still dominates in settlement volume and total transaction fees, but compared to its historical highs, its fee revenue has significantly declined. Currently, Ethereum functions more as a high-value settlement layer rather than a high-frequency interaction network. BNB Chain, on the other hand, leads comprehensively in active addresses and transaction counts, demonstrating stronger user stickiness.
On-chain data for Polygon and Sei Network show clear event-driven characteristics, with significant fluctuations in activity and no stable usage curve yet. This sharply contrasts with BNB Chain’s sustained high activity with low volatility, further reinforcing its structural advantages.
Looking ahead to 2026, the core competitive variables within the EVM ecosystem will no longer be short-term growth peaks but rather user retention and real-world application scenarios. As regulatory environments become clearer and applications in payments, gaming, and social media continue to land, those capable of supporting long-term, stable user activity are likely to become the next layer-one winners.
At this stage, BNB Chain is proving with data that the future of EVM may not belong to the hottest narratives but to the chains most frequently used.
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Is BNB Chain surpassing Ethereum? A structural shift in the EVM adoption trend is emerging by 2025
In the second half of 2025, the competitive focus within the EVM ecosystem is undergoing subtle yet crucial changes. The latest on-chain data indicates that the battle for EVM dominance is no longer primarily driven by token prices or short-term narratives, but is gradually shifting towards genuine user engagement and retention capabilities. Against this backdrop, BNB Chain has performed particularly well, quietly establishing an advantage as it moves toward 2026.
According to data disclosed by Nansen on the X platform, since July 2025, BNB Chain has consistently led other EVM chains in active addresses and has maintained high levels over the long term. Unlike many EVM chains that rely on episodic surges, BNB Chain exhibits stable and continuous usage characteristics, making it more akin to “everyday infrastructure” rather than a speculative tool.
The core driver of this trend stems from retail users’ high-frequency usage, low transaction fees, and deep integration with mainstream entry points like Gate, which align user pathways. This synergy lowers the barrier for new users and increases the repeat rate of on-chain interactions. In contrast, while Base experienced a rapid rise in activity, it lacked sustainability, with transaction behaviors more driven by incentives rather than genuine demand.
Overall, Ethereum still dominates in settlement volume and total transaction fees, but compared to its historical highs, its fee revenue has significantly declined. Currently, Ethereum functions more as a high-value settlement layer rather than a high-frequency interaction network. BNB Chain, on the other hand, leads comprehensively in active addresses and transaction counts, demonstrating stronger user stickiness.
On-chain data for Polygon and Sei Network show clear event-driven characteristics, with significant fluctuations in activity and no stable usage curve yet. This sharply contrasts with BNB Chain’s sustained high activity with low volatility, further reinforcing its structural advantages.
Looking ahead to 2026, the core competitive variables within the EVM ecosystem will no longer be short-term growth peaks but rather user retention and real-world application scenarios. As regulatory environments become clearer and applications in payments, gaming, and social media continue to land, those capable of supporting long-term, stable user activity are likely to become the next layer-one winners.
At this stage, BNB Chain is proving with data that the future of EVM may not belong to the hottest narratives but to the chains most frequently used.