SUMMARY
Ten years ago, Ethereum sparked the imagination of decentralization with a white paper. A decade later, it remains the core of the crypto world but no longer the only stage. This blog traces Ethereum’s journey—from the birth of the world computer and early crises, through explosive growth, to recent challenges and the road ahead. While still powerful, Ethereum faces a critical midlife crossroads, searching for new directions to reignite global imagination.
The Birth of a New Computing Era
Over the past century, humanity has repeatedly redefined computing. From the giant machines built to guide rockets in the mid-20th century, to IBM’s mainframes powering enterprises, then Microsoft and Apple bringing PCs to millions, and finally smartphones putting computers in everyone’s pocket.
Each leap in computing power transformed how people connect with the world.
In 2013, a 19-year-old Vitalik Buterin, frustrated while playing World of Warcraft, wondered: in a digital world, who ensures the rules don’t get arbitrarily changed?
What if there were a “world computer” — decentralized, owned by no single company or authority, open for anyone to use? Could this be the next leap in computing?
On July 30, 2015, in a small Berlin office, dozens of young developers watched a block counter closely. When it reached block 1,028,201, Ethereum’s mainnet launched automatically.
Vitalik recalled, “We were all there waiting, and then it finally hit that number, and about half a minute later the blocks started to generate.”
That moment ignited the spark of the world computer.
The Early Years and the First Crises
Back then, Ethereum had fewer than a hundred developers. It introduced smart contracts embedded into the blockchain — a Turing-complete platform that transformed blockchain from just a ledger into a global public computer capable of running programs.
The young network soon faced severe tests.
In June 2016, the DAO, a decentralized autonomous organization built on Ethereum, suffered a major security breach. Hackers exploited a smart contract vulnerability to steal roughly $50-60 million worth of Ether. The community fiercely debated whether to “roll back history” to rescue the funds. Ultimately, they chose a hard fork to recover assets, which also led to the creation of Ethereum Classic — a split chain that upheld immutability.
This incident thrust governance questions onto the stage: Should blockchain remain immutable at all costs, or allow fixes to protect users?
The ICO Boom and Scalability Challenges
Between 2017 and 2018, the ICO craze catapulted Ethereum to new heights. Thousands of projects issued tokens on Ethereum, raising billions and driving ETH price to unprecedented levels.
But the bubble burst soon after. By late 2018, ETH had lost over 90% from its peak. Network congestion and high fees drew widespread criticism. The viral CryptoKitties game even clogged the mainnet to near paralysis — the first clear sign the world computer’s computing power was insufficient.
To solve performance bottlenecks, Ethereum had researched sharding since 2015, aiming to split node verification load to increase throughput. Yet sharding proved complex and slow to implement.
Meanwhile, developers explored off-chain scaling: state channels, Plasma, and by 2019, rollups gained traction. Rollups batch many transactions off-chain and submit compressed proofs to the mainnet, dramatically boosting capacity but requiring reliable data availability on-chain.
Fortunately, around 2019, Ethereum achieved breakthroughs in data availability solutions, unlocking large-scale validation.
The Multi-Layered World Computer
Ethereum gradually adopted a “secure mainnet, layer-2 execution” expansion path, decomposing the world computer into a multi-layer collaborative system.
The subsequent years saw DeFi explode — decentralized lending, trading, derivatives sprouted rapidly. NFTs brought digital art mainstream attention, with Beeple’s piece selling for $69 million at Christie’s.
Despite booming activity, fees remained high. Ethereum responded with protocol improvements, notably the August 2021 EIP-1559 upgrade, which introduced a base fee burn mechanism to reduce inflation during high demand. This reform briefly made ETH deflationary, pushing its price near $4,900.
On September 15, 2022, The Merge completed — switching Ethereum’s consensus from energy-hungry Proof of Work to Proof of Stake, cutting energy use by 99% and issuance by 90%. ETH holders began staking to secure the network, fundamentally changing the world computer’s energy model.
The Last Ten Years
One year post-Merge, Ethereum’s circulating supply had shrunk by about 300,000 ETH versus expected PoW issuance, strengthening scarcity expectations.
By the end of 2023, mainnet performance and economic mechanisms improved, but new challenges emerged.
To lower fees and foster rollup growth, Ethereum implemented the “Dencun” upgrade (Deneb + Cancun) in March 2024. It introduced EIP-4844, aka Proto-Danksharding, adding “data blob” transactions for rollups to submit bulk data cheaply and temporarily, greatly reducing costs. This was a major step toward full sharding.
After ten years, Ethereum had transformed from a whitepaper ideal into an indispensable infrastructure. Yet behind the lights of countless nodes, new shadows quietly appeared.
The Midlife Crisis
Entering 2024-2025, Ethereum’s dilemmas became clear.
Layer 2 Drain on Mainnet Value
Rollups relieved mainnet congestion but shifted large transaction volumes and value off-chain, eroding mainnet’s value capture.
A 2025 report by Standard Chartered bluntly noted that leading rollups like Coinbase’s Base “have taken away” roughly $50 billion in Ethereum ecosystem market cap.
Transactions and apps that might have run on the mainnet now run cheaper on Layer 2s, reducing mainnet fee income and activity.
After the Dencun upgrade lowered rollup costs further, Layer 2 daily transactions on Arbitrum, Optimism, and others often rival or exceed the mainnet’s, validating the outsourcing narrative.
The world computer’s parts run efficiently outside, but the host machine’s value capture weakens.
Increasing Competition from Other Chains
Ethereum’s early performance and cost issues invited competitors.
High-throughput Solana attracted developers and meme projects during the recent bull market. Tron, with near-zero fees, dominates stablecoin transfers — USDT issuance on Tron exceeds 80 billion tokens, surpassing Ethereum in volume.
BNB Smart Chain and others carved market share in GameFi and altcoin trading.
Though Ethereum remains top in DeFi protocols and TVL (56% industry share as of July 2025), its relative dominance has declined in a multichain world.
Governance and Security Concerns
Post-PoS staking raised centralization fears.
Validators need 32 ETH to participate, pushing retail users into staking pools or exchanges, concentrating power.
Lido, the largest decentralized pool, once held over 32% of staked ETH. Though now slightly below 25%, it far exceeds Binance (~8.3%) and Coinbase (~6.9%).
Community worries a single entity controlling over one-third consensus power could threaten network security.
Vitalik advocated fee limits to cap validator share below 15%, but a 2022 Lido governance proposal to self-limit was rejected by over 99% of votes.
Currently, ~1.12 million validators secure the network with over 36 million ETH staked (~29.17% of total supply).
How to diversify staking without sacrificing security remains unresolved.
Controversies around the Foundation
Over the years, the Ethereum Foundation faced criticism for opacity in funding and asset management, including ETH sales at peak prices without full disclosure.
Some early developers viewed the Foundation’s “laissez-faire” approach as fostering fragmentation and incoherent narratives, weakening governance.
Key early voices like Vitalik now rarely make clear public stands, opting to avoid influencing market sentiment or governance disputes.
This restraint has created a leadership vacuum: no consensus drivers, few willing decision-makers, fewer open discussions, and more closed-door technical planning.
The world computer runs, but its sense of direction wanes.
Application Layer Stagnation and Market Impact
Ethereum aims not only to provide compute and security but also a fertile ground for innovation.
Yet after a decade, only DeFi and NFTs emerged as widely successful, market-validated applications.
Other ambitious sectors — social, gaming, identity, DAO governance — failed to produce breakout hits.
Web3 social apps like Friend.tech and Lens briefly surged but quickly faded, with low retention.
Chain-based gaming mostly remained tokenomics experiments without mainstream adoption.
Decentralized identity and DAOs are mostly niche experiments.
On-chain data confirms this: by July 2025, daily ETH burned dropped below 50 — a historic low versus nearly 1,000 daily at peak 2021 fever.
Seven-day average active addresses hovered around 566,000, below peaks since March 2024.
Daily new addresses averaged ~120,000; monthly transactions stabilized at 35-40 million.
For a self-proclaimed world computer, no new large-scale waves of innovation ignite the network.
Market Performance Reflects the Plateau
ETH price touched nearly $4,900 in November 2021 but has not surpassed that since.
Despite Merge and fee reforms, price gains lag Bitcoin, Solana, and BNB from 2022 to 2024.
By 2025, other crypto assets continually hit new highs while ETH lingered just above $3,000.
The ETH/BTC ratio dipped below 0.02 in April 2025, a multi-year low.
Once the fuel of smart contracts, ETH’s wealth effect is fading.
Recently, institutional treasury strategies from companies like Sharplink Gaming and BitMine have bolstered ETH demand via convertible bonds and staking-based returns.
ETH’s native yield through staking makes it attractive as an interest-bearing digital asset for corporate treasuries.
ETH price rebounded above $3,600 within weeks.
However, analysts warn this rebound stems mainly from active capital allocation, not organic developer innovation or user growth — a stopgap rather than a renaissance.
The Road Ahead: The Next Decade
Ethereum’s fate now hinges on whether technology and ecosystem can open new growth avenues.
Technology: Faster and More Unified
The community has mapped post-Merge upgrade blueprints.
Vitalik’s article “The Surge” outlines goals: increasing combined Layer 1 and Layer 2 throughput to 100,000 transactions per second while preserving L1 decentralization and robustness.
At least some L2s should inherit Ethereum’s core values: trustlessness, openness, censorship resistance.
The network experience should feel unified, not 34 fragmented blockchains. Cross-layer transfers, fund flows, and app switching should be as seamless as single-chain operations.
EIP-4844 in 2024 was a start; upcoming data sampling and compression will push this further.
Advances in zero-knowledge proofs (ZK-SNARKs, ZK-STARKs) may break performance bottlenecks, potentially luring users back from rival chains and L2s.
Governance and Economics: Recapturing Value
Beyond performance, Ethereum must rethink how to capture value for the core network.
In July 2025, the Foundation launched “Future of Ecosystem Development” reforms, stepping from behind the scenes to lead.
They set two long-term goals: maximize direct and indirect users benefiting from Ethereum’s foundational values, and enhance technological and social infrastructure resilience.
The Foundation reorganized into four pillars: acceleration, amplification, support, and long-term facilitation.
New teams focus on enterprise relations, developer growth, app support, and founder backing, with strengthened communications and narrative building to boost community cohesion.
Transparency promises increased; public product funding is more targeted; Launchpad initiatives support governance and sustainability; operating expenses will shrink, with a 2.5-year funding buffer set.
These moves address past criticisms of inaction, signaling a renewed charge for the coming decade.
Community discussions explore extracting value from Layer 2 prosperity, optimizing fee and MEV distribution to ensure the mainnet shares in rollup-era growth.
Such ideas reflect widespread anxiety that without proactive adjustment, the mainnet risks becoming a mere settlement layer with eroding value and vitality.
Searching for New Sparks
Technology and funding alone won’t suffice.
Every past Ethereum boom was fueled by new apps and narratives.
Now, the entire blockchain space faces an innovation lull, lacking blockbuster breakthroughs.
Perhaps blockchain itself must revolutionize, spawning new stories and use cases in social, identity, AI, and beyond.
Some believe the next wave may come from outside disruptions.
Vitalik, in his “Next Decade of Ethereum” talk, urged developers not to simply replicate Web2 but to embrace future interaction forms: wearables, AR, brain-computer interfaces, local AI — integrating these new frontiers into Web3 design.
Looking back, Ethereum still commands the largest developer community, richest applications, and deepest technical base.
Yet it faces intersecting bottlenecks, competition, and renewal.
Vitalik said, “Ethereum’s past ten years were focused on theory. The next ten must focus on impact.”
Next-generation apps must not only be functional but uphold shared values and be intuitive enough to draw millions yet outside crypto users.
Conclusion
The world computer faces its ten-year itch. It hasn’t stopped running but seeks new directions.
The next decade belongs to Ethereum and every believer in this dream.
As Vitalik says, “Everyone in the Ethereum community has the opportunity to participate in building the future together.”