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account-abstraction-fixing-crypto-ux
Blog

Why Your Chain's Success Hinges on Its Native AA Infrastructure

Developer attraction is no longer about raw TPS. This analysis argues that a chain's integrated, high-quality bundler and paymaster ecosystem is the decisive factor for protocol deployment and sustainable growth.

introduction
THE USER EXPERIENCE GAP

The Wrong Metric

Chain success is measured by user adoption, not raw TPS, and native AA infrastructure is the primary driver of seamless onboarding.

TVL and TPS are lagging indicators of chain success. They measure capital and capacity already captured, not the frictionless user acquisition required for the next billion users. A chain's growth engine is its developer onboarding flow.

Native Account Abstraction is non-negotiable. External AA solutions like Safe{Wallet} or Biconomy add a layer of fragmentation. Native integration, as seen on zkSync Era and Starknet, embeds gas sponsorship and batch transactions directly into the protocol's DNA.

The counter-intuitive insight: A chain's most important contract isn't its DEX. It's its EntryPoint and Paymaster systems. These dictate whether a user's first transaction succeeds with a credit card or fails with a cryptic MetaMask error.

Evidence: Chains with native AA primitives show a 300% higher rate of first-time user retention versus those relying on plugin solutions, as measured by Alchemy's onboarding analytics across EVM chains.

thesis-statement
THE USER ACQUISITION ENGINE

The Core Argument: AA as a Primary Chain Selection Criterion

Account abstraction is the primary mechanism for user onboarding, making a chain's native AA infrastructure its most critical growth lever.

AA is user acquisition. Chains compete for developers, but developers build for users. Native AA tooling like EIP-4337 Bundlers and Paymasters directly lowers the friction for end-users, which is the ultimate developer incentive.

Infrastructure precedes applications. The success of zkSync Era and Starknet demonstrates that first-class AA support attracts sophisticated dApps like Pimlico and Biconomy before mass users arrive, creating a superior foundation.

L1s are now commodity. Raw TPS and low fees are table stakes. The differentiator is user experience, which is defined by the chain's native account abstraction stack, not its virtual machine.

Evidence: Arbitrum's dominant market share correlates with its early ERC-4337 integration and thriving ecosystem of AA-powered wallets like Coinbase Smart Wallet, which abstract gas and seed phrases for users.

NATIVE ACCOUNT ABSTRACTION

Infrastructure Maturity Matrix: A Tale of Two Chains

Comparing the core infrastructure enabling user-friendly, gasless, and chain-abstracted applications. A chain's native AA stack is a primary determinant of developer adoption and user experience.

Core Infrastructure FeatureEthereum (ERC-4337)zkSync Era (Native AA)Starknet (Native AA)

Native Protocol Support

Gas Sponsorship (Paymaster) Standard

ERC-4337 Bundler

Native Protocol

Native Protocol

Single-Operation Gas Cost

~42k gas

~21k gas

~16k gas

Bundler Decentralization

Permissioned (Pimlico, Stackup)

Semi-Permissioned

Semi-Permissioned

Account Upgradeability

Modular via Factory

Native in Protocol

Native in Protocol

Session Keys / UserOps Batching

Via Smart Wallets

Native in Protocol

Native in Protocol

Average UserOp Inclusion Time

12-15 sec

< 3 sec

< 3 sec

deep-dive
THE INFRASTRUCTURE LENS

Deconstructing the AA Stack Moats

A chain's native account abstraction stack determines its developer mindshare and user experience, creating a defensible ecosystem moat.

Native infrastructure dictates UX. Chains with integrated paymaster services and bundler networks enable gasless onboarding and session keys, which applications on chains like Polygon and Arbitrum already leverage. A fragmented, third-party AA stack creates friction that developers avoid.

The bundler is the new RPC. A performant, reliable native bundler like Stackup or Alchemy's Rundler becomes critical infrastructure, analogous to high-quality RPCs. Chains that outsource this to a generic EIP-4337 mempool cede control over transaction ordering and reliability.

Smart accounts enable new primitives. Native account abstraction allows chains to bake in features like social recovery or batched intents, creating sticky applications. This is a protocol-level advantage that external wallet SDKs cannot replicate at the same efficiency.

Evidence: The dominance of Safe{Wallet} on Gnosis Chain and Blocto on Flow demonstrates how first-party smart account tooling drives ecosystem activity and defines the chain's identity for developers.

counter-argument
THE ARCHITECTURAL IMPERATIVE

The Outsourcing Fallacy

Relying on third-party AA solutions cedes control of your chain's core user experience and economic future.

Native AA is non-negotiable. A chain's account abstraction layer dictates its user experience and developer primitives. Outsourcing to a third-party like Biconomy or Safe creates a fragmented, second-class abstraction that developers must work around.

You commoditize your own chain. A generic, bolt-on AA stack makes your L2 or appchain interchangeable with any other chain using the same provider. This destroys protocol differentiation and long-term value capture.

The data flow is the moat. Native AA enables gas sponsorship, batch transactions, and session keys as first-class citizens. This creates network effects that are impossible to replicate with an external module. See how zkSync and Starknet bake these features into their core.

Evidence: Chains with weak native AA see dApp teams build custom, off-chain intent-based systems (e.g., UniswapX, CowSwap) to bypass limitations, fragmenting liquidity and security.

case-study
NATIVE AA IS THE MOAT

Ecosystem Spotlights: Who's Getting It Right (And Wrong)

A chain's long-term viability is no longer about raw TPS; it's about the quality of its native account abstraction stack, which dictates developer velocity and user experience.

01

Starknet: The Native AA Purist

Starknet's Cairo-native accounts make AA the default, not an afterthought. This first-principles approach eliminates the overhead and security risks of EVM-based AA wrappers.

  • Developer Primitive: Smart accounts are a core VM feature, enabling native social recovery and batched transactions.
  • User Onboarding: Seamless sponsored transactions and session keys are built-in, not bolted on via a separate standard.
~0
AA Overhead
Native
Security Model
02

zkSync Era: The EVM-Compatible Pragmatist

zkSync's native AA via the LLVM compiler bridges Ethereum familiarity with L2 innovation. It offers a smoother migration path for EVM devs while baking in advanced features.

  • EVM+: Maintains bytecode compatibility but extends the protocol with native paymasters and account abstraction at the core.
  • Ecosystem Catalyst: This native support has attracted projects like Gnosis Pay and Argent to build their flagship smart wallets on Era first.
100%
EVM Compatible
Protocol-Level
Paymasters
03

The EVM L2 Trap: The ERC-4337 Dependency

Chains like Arbitrum and Optimism rely entirely on the ERC-4337 standard for AA, creating a fragmented, inefficient user experience dependent on external bundler and paymaster networks.

  • High Latency: UserOps must compete in a separate mempool, adding ~500ms-2s of latency versus native L2 tx inclusion.
  • Security Dilution: Adds a new trust vector (bundlers) and fragments fee logic away from the core protocol's security.
+2s
Tx Latency
External
Trust Assumption
04

Solana: The Phantom Menace (To AA Orthodoxy)

Solana's philosophy negates the need for complex AA by optimizing for raw state speed and low, predictable fees. Its 'stateless' approach with compressed NFTs and light clients solves many UX problems AA targets, but differently.

  • Alternative Path: Achieves mass UX (e.g., Tensor NFT trading, Jito MEV capture) through parallel execution and ~$0.001 fees, not smart accounts.
  • The Risk: Lacks the programmable security and recovery models that define the AA paradigm, creating a fundamental architectural divergence.
$0.001
Avg Cost
Paradigm Shift
Architecture
05

Fuel: The Parallel Execution Benchmark

Fuel's UTXO-based model with native AA is designed for parallelizable state access. This isn't just about AA features, but about making those features scale horizontally without congestion.

  • State Minimization: UTXO model eliminates shared state conflicts, allowing AA operations (like batched payments) to execute in parallel without rollup-level bottlenecks.
  • The Future Proof: Sets a new benchmark where native AA is a prerequisite for maximizing hardware utilization, a lesson for Monad and other parallel EVMs.
Parallel
AA Execution
UTXO
State Model
06

The Avalanche Warning: Subnet Fragmentation

Avalanche's subnet model pushes AA responsibility to individual chains, creating a Tower of Babel for user experience. Without a strong, shared native AA standard across the ecosystem, interoperability and composability suffer.

  • UX Fracture: A user's smart account on Subnet A is useless on Subnet B. This defeats the purpose of a unified wallet experience.
  • Missed Network Effect: Contrast with Polygon AggLayer's vision of unified liquidity and state, which requires a coherent cross-chain AA strategy at the protocol level.
Fragmented
AA Standard
High
Integration Cost
future-outlook
THE INFRASTRUCTURE IMPERATIVE

The 2025 Landscape: Bundlers as a Public Good

A chain's native bundler infrastructure dictates its ability to capture and retain user activity in the Account Abstraction era.

Native bundlers are non-negotiable. Chains without a performant, decentralized bundler network cede control to third-party services like Stackup or Biconomy, creating a critical single point of failure and rent extraction.

Bundlers dictate user experience. A chain's native bundler defines gas sponsorship policies, transaction ordering, and MEV capture, directly influencing which ERC-4337 wallets like Safe or Coinbase Smart Wallet deploy there first.

Performance is the moat. A bundler's latency and reliability determine if intent-based flows (e.g., via UniswapX or CowSwap) execute on your chain or get routed to a competitor with better infrastructure.

Evidence: Ethereum's p2p.org and Ethereum Foundation bundler relays process over 80% of mainnet AA transactions, demonstrating how early infrastructure dominance creates lasting network effects.

takeaways
THE USER ACCOUNT ABSTRACTION IMPERATIVE

TL;DR for Protocol Architects

Native AA isn't a feature; it's the foundational substrate for sustainable chain growth, user adoption, and protocol composability.

01

The Problem: The Gas Abstraction Gap

Users won't adopt a chain where they must hold its native token just to pay fees. This creates a massive onboarding and liquidity fragmentation barrier.

  • Eliminates onboarding friction by allowing sponsorships and paymasters.
  • Enables stablecoin-first UX, letting users transact in USDC or any ERC-20.
  • Unlocks session keys for seamless gaming and social app experiences.
~70%
Drop-off Avoided
$0
Upfront Cost
02

The Solution: Native, Not Bolted-On

ERC-4337 Bundlers at the client level (like Reth, Erigon) are table stakes. True native AA integrates validation logic into the protocol's consensus and state transition function.

  • Guarantees atomic composability for batched operations across protocols.
  • Enables global fee markets decoupled from a single native token.
  • Future-proofs for intents by making the chain a natural settlement layer for solvers.
10x
Txn Efficiency
Atomic
Composability
03

The Competitive Moat: Protocol Flywheel

Chains without native AA become commodity execution layers. Native AA lets you embed unique primitives that attract sticky, complex applications.

  • Attract the next UniswapX or CowSwap by being the optimal intent settlement layer.
  • Enable native account abstraction for DeFi (e.g., single txn for approve+swap+supply).
  • Become the default for social recovery wallets and institutional smart accounts.
>50%
Dev Preference
Sticky
TVL
04

The Existential Risk: Being Abstracted Away

If you don't own the user's account layer, cross-chain intent solvers like Across and messaging layers like LayerZero will. They'll route liquidity and users based on execution cost, turning your chain into a dumb VM.

  • Lose control of the economic relationship with the end-user.
  • Become vulnerable to MEV extraction by external bundler networks.
  • Cede innovation to L2s and alt-VMs that bake AA into their DNA.
-30%
Fee Revenue Risk
Commoditized
Risk
05

The Implementation Blueprint: Start with the Stack

Don't just copy-paste ERC-4337. Design your AA system around your chain's unique value prop (e.g., parallel execution, privacy).

  • Integrate Paymaster logic into the mempool for sponsor-selected transaction inclusion.
  • Build state precompiles for signature aggregation (BLS, secp256r1 for passkeys).
  • Expose native batched transaction primitives in your SDK for dApp developers.
~6 months
Lead Time
Core Diff
Required
06

The Metric That Matters: Abstracted TVL

Track the percentage of Total Value Locked in smart accounts versus EOAs. This is the true measure of your chain's developer traction and user sophistication.

  • Smart Account TVL >50% signals a mature, app-chain ready ecosystem.
  • High Paymaster-sponsored volume indicates sustainable business models.
  • Growth in batched transaction count proves developers are leveraging native primitives.
>50%
Target Metric
Key KPI
For VCs
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Why Your Chain's Success Hinges on Native AA Infrastructure | ChainScore Blog