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wallet-wars-smart-accounts-vs-embedded-wallets
Blog

The Future of User Acquisition: Paying for Gas as a Growth Lever

Airdrops are dying. The new growth playbook uses direct gas subsidies to acquire users, creating a measurable on-chain Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) and reshaping the battle between smart accounts and embedded wallets.

introduction
THE NEW GAS WAR

Introduction

The next user acquisition battleground is abstracting transaction costs, shifting competition from marketing budgets to protocol treasury design.

Gas sponsorship is the new airdrop. Protocols like Base and zkSync use gasless onboarding to subsidize user acquisition, converting a technical friction point into a direct growth lever.

The subsidy model is unsustainable. Direct gas payment drains treasuries linearly with usage, unlike the fixed-cost efficiency of traditional referral or ad campaigns.

Intent-based architectures solve this. Frameworks like UniswapX and Across enable batch settlement and MEV capture, allowing protocols to monetize flow and offset subsidy costs.

Evidence: Arbitrum's $130M+ in sequencer revenue demonstrates the latent value in transaction flow, which intent-based gas abstraction will unlock for user-facing applications.

market-context
THE NEW GROWTH ENGINE

The Airdrop Hangover: Why CAC Must Move On-Chain

Protocols must shift from speculative airdrops to embedding user acquisition costs directly into their economic model via subsidized gas.

Airdrops are a broken model. They attract mercenary capital, not users, creating a negative-sum game for the protocol treasury. The post-airdrop sell pressure destroys token value and leaves no sustainable user base.

On-chain CAC is the solution. Protocols must treat gas sponsorship as a core growth lever. This moves acquisition costs from a treasury drain to a protocol-native utility, directly funding real user activity.

Account abstraction enables this shift. Tools like EIP-4337 and ERC-4337 allow for sponsored transactions and session keys. Users interact without holding native tokens, removing the primary onboarding friction.

The data proves the model. Base's Onchain Summer and Starknet's fee waivers demonstrated that subsidized gas drives a 10x increase in genuine user transactions compared to airdrop farming patterns.

USER ACQUISITION COST ANALYSIS

Growth Lever Comparison: Airdrops vs. Gas Subsidies

A quantitative breakdown of two dominant user acquisition strategies in crypto, comparing capital efficiency, targeting, and long-term user quality.

Metric / FeatureRetroactive AirdropsProactive Gas SubsidiesHybrid Model (e.g., Blast)

Primary Goal

Reward past users & create token liquidity

Lower barrier to entry for new users

Combine liquidity bootstrapping with user onboarding

Typical User Acquisition Cost (UAC)

$200 - $500+ per claimed user

$0.50 - $5.00 per subsidized tx

$50 - $150 (mix of subsidy & future airdrop promise)

Targeting Precision

Low (retroactive, rewards existing behavior)

High (proactive, targets users at point of friction)

Medium (proactive sign-up for future retroactive reward)

Time-to-Value for User

Months (post-hoc claim)

Seconds (immediate fee reduction)

Split (immediate subsidy + deferred airdrop)

Sybil Attack Resistance

Low (incentivizes farming)

High (costly to spam without utility)

Medium (initial farming, but requires locked capital)

Retention Driver

Speculative token value

Core product utility & experience

Speculation + locked capital (e.g., ETH staking)

Capital Efficiency (Retained Users)

< 10% (high churn post-claim)

15-30% (users acquired for utility)

TBD (depends on lock-up success)

Example Protocols

Uniswap, Arbitrum, Starknet

Polygon zkEVM, BNB Chain, zkSync Lite

Blast, EigenLayer restaking pools

deep-dive
THE GROWTH LEVER

The Mechanics: How Gas Sponsorship Becomes a Growth Engine

Gas sponsorship transforms a cost center into a programmable user acquisition channel with measurable ROI.

Gas sponsorship is a direct CAC play. Protocols pay for user transactions to eliminate the primary friction of onboarding, converting a speculative user into an active one with a single sponsored interaction, unlike traditional airdrops which often fail to drive sustained usage.

The mechanism is a programmable subsidy. Smart contracts like ERC-4337 Account Abstraction and relayers (e.g., Biconomy, Gelato) enable dApps to sponsor gas for specific actions, creating targeted funnels for high-value actions like minting an NFT or swapping on a new DEX.

This creates a measurable growth loop. Sponsorship cost per user is a clear metric; conversion from sponsored tx to a second, self-funded tx defines LTV. This data-driven model outperforms vague marketing spends on influencers or generic ads.

Evidence: After implementing gasless transactions via Biconomy, Polygon's adoption spiked; dApps like Quickswap saw user onboarding time drop from minutes to seconds, directly increasing wallet activation rates.

protocol-spotlight
THE NEW GROWTH ENGINE

Protocol Spotlight: Who's Building the Gas-Subsidy Stack

Gas fees are the primary UX killer. These protocols are turning them into a strategic acquisition channel, abstracting cost to capture users.

01

The Problem: User Onboarding is a Funnel of Friction

Every new user faces a cold-start liquidity problem for gas. This kills conversion. The solution isn't just paying for gas, but making it invisible.

  • ~40% abandonment rate for first-time on-chain transactions.
  • Forces users to think in native tokens before experiencing your dApp.
  • Creates a fragmented, hostile UX that benefits no one.
40%
Drop-off Rate
5+ Steps
Friction Points
02

ERC-4337 & Paymasters: The Foundational Layer

Account Abstraction's paymaster contract is the atomic unit of gas sponsorship. It decouples payment from execution, enabling novel business models.

  • Sponsorship: dApps pay for user ops in any token (including stablecoins).
  • Subscription: Users sign a session key for batched, pre-paid transactions.
  • Gasless: Users sign, dApp pays, creating a true Web2-like experience.
ERC-4337
Standard
0 Gas
User Cost
03

Pimlico & Stackup: The Infrastructure Aggregators

These are the AWS for gas subsidies. They abstract paymaster complexity, offer bundler services, and provide reliable gas estimation across chains.

  • Paymaster as a Service: One API to sponsor user ops on Ethereum, Polygon, Arbitrum.
  • Gas Tank Management: Auto-refill wallets with stablecoins, handle multi-chain sponsorship.
  • Critical for scale: No serious dApp should build this plumbing in-house.
1 API
Integration
Multi-Chain
Coverage
04

Biconomy & ZeroDev: The dApp-First SDKs

They productize gas subsidies for developers. If Pimlico is infrastructure, these are the frontend widgets and SDKs that get it to users.

  • Smart Accounts by Default: Users get ERC-4337 wallets out-of-the-box.
  • Plug-and-Play Sponsorship: Toggle gasless transactions with a few lines of code.
  • Cross-Chain Gas: Use LayerZero or CCIP messages to pay for gas on a destination chain from a source chain.
<1 Hour
Integration Time
90%+
UX Improvement
05

The Business Model: Subsidize to Capture Lifetime Value

This isn't charity. It's CAC vs. LTV. Pay $0.50 in gas to acquire a user worth $50 in fees. The math is brutally simple.

  • Performance Marketing: Pay only for successful transactions (converted users).
  • Stickiness: Users acquired into a smart account are harder to churn.
  • Data Advantage: Own the user session and transaction flow.
10x
ROI Target
$0.50 CAC
Acquisition Cost
06

The Endgame: Gas as a Commodity & The New Aggregators

Gas becomes a backend cost, like AWS bills. Winners will be aggregators of demand who get the best rates, similar to 1inch for swaps.

  • Cross-Chain Gas Markets: Sponsor a user's journey from Arbitrum to Base seamlessly.
  • Intent-Based: Users express a goal ("swap X for Y"), the network routes and pays for gas optimally.
  • **This makes protocols like UniswapX and Across natural extensions of the gas-subsidy stack.
~$1B+
Market Size
Intent-Based
Future State
counter-argument
THE GROWTH HACK

The Bear Case: Subsidy Wars and Economic Sustainability

Gas fee subsidies are a potent but economically unsustainable user acquisition strategy that risks creating a race to the bottom.

Gas subsidies are a marketing expense. Protocols like zkSync Era and Arbitrum have spent millions on gas rebates to bootstrap liquidity and users, treating transaction fees as a customer acquisition cost. This strategy works for initial traction but creates no long-term moat.

The subsidy model is a race to the bottom. When Polygon and Optimism compete on fee grants, they commoditize their own infrastructure. Users become mercenaries, chasing the next free transaction, which erodes brand loyalty and protocol revenue.

Sustainable models require embedded value capture. Successful chains like Solana and Avalanche subsidize early on but pivot to native applications that generate fees. The endgame is not cheap gas, but a fee-generating ecosystem that funds its own growth.

Evidence: Layer 2 networks have collectively subsidized over $50M in user gas fees. The Arbitrum Odyssey campaign, which offered NFTs for on-chain activity, congested the network and was paused, demonstrating the fragility of pure incentive-driven growth.

risk-analysis
EXISTENTIAL THREATS

Risk Analysis: What Could Derail the Gas Subsidy Thesis

Gas subsidies are a powerful growth hack, but they introduce systemic fragility and perverse incentives that could collapse the model.

01

The Sybil & MEV Attack Vector

Subsidies create a direct financial incentive for bots to spam the network, extracting value and degrading UX for real users.

  • Sybil Onslaught: Bots create infinite wallets to drain subsidy pools, turning growth budgets into pure waste.
  • MEV Extraction: Front-running and sandwich attacks on sponsored transactions can capture >90% of the subsidy value.
  • Network Degradation: Spam drives up base gas prices, negating the subsidy's benefit and creating a death spiral.
>90%
Value Extracted
10x+
Spam Traffic
02

The Protocol Sustainability Trap

Treating gas as a marketing expense ignores its role as a fundamental network resource fee, leading to unsustainable economics.

  • Ponzi Dynamics: New user subsidies must be funded by protocol revenue or token inflation, creating a >100% CAC/LTV mismatch.
  • Vampire Attack Vulnerability: Competitors can easily replicate the subsidy, triggering a race-to-zero that burns both treasuries.
  • Post-Subsidy Churn: Users acquired on free transactions exhibit ~80%+ churn rate when asked to pay, revealing no real product-market fit.
>100%
CAC/LTV
~80%
User Churn
03

Regulatory Blowback & Centralization

Aggregating and paying for user transactions creates a centralized service layer that attracts regulatory scrutiny and creates a single point of failure.

  • Money Transmitter Risk: Entities like Coinbase's Base or Blast managing subsidy funds may be classified as financial services, requiring licenses.
  • Censorship Leverage: The subsidy provider becomes a gatekeeper, able to blacklist addresses or dApps, undermining permissionless ideals.
  • Systemic Collapse: If a major subsidizer (e.g., a large L2) fails or is sanctioned, entire application ecosystems built on free gas could instantly die.
1
Point of Failure
04

The Abstraction Endgame (EIP-3074, 4337)

Native wallet improvements and new standards will make third-party gas subsidies obsolete, rendering the entire business model redundant.

  • Native Sponsored Transactions: EIP-3074 allows any EOA to have gas paid by a sponsor, bypassing dedicated subsidy middleware.
  • Account Abstraction Dominance: With ERC-4337, users can pay fees in any token or have them deducted from their transaction output, eliminating the need for a separate subsidy service.
  • Innovator's Dilemma: Startups building subsidy infrastructure today are creating a feature, not a product, destined to be absorbed by the protocol layer.
EIP-3074/4337
Native Protocol
future-outlook
THE USER ACQUISITION FRONTIER

Future Outlook: The Wallet Wars Endgame

Winning wallets will subsidize transaction costs to capture users, turning gas abstraction into a primary growth lever.

Gas abstraction becomes the primary growth lever for wallet acquisition. The winning strategy is not better UI, but paying for user transactions. This shifts competition from features to capital efficiency, where the deepest treasury wins the most users.

Sponsored transactions are the new user onboarding standard. Protocols like Pimlico and Biconomy abstract gas for dApps, but wallets will integrate this directly. The model mirrors web2's 'first ride free' strategy, lowering the absolute barrier to entry.

The counter-intuitive risk is subsidy arbitrage. Users will exploit wallets offering the most generous gas grants, creating a PvP game between treasury managers. This necessitates sophisticated fraud detection akin to Coinbase's batcher or Flashbots' SUAVE.

Evidence: Coinbase Wallet's Smart Wallet already uses account abstraction (ERC-4337) to sponsor gas for new users. Their data shows a 40% increase in successful first transactions, proving the model's immediate impact on user activation.

takeaways
GAS AS A GROWTH ENGINE

Key Takeaways

The next wave of user acquisition will be won by protocols that abstract away the final UX barrier: the gas fee.

01

The Problem: The $10 Onboarding Tax

Requiring users to hold native tokens for gas is a ~$10+ onboarding tax that kills conversion. It's the single biggest point of friction for new users, creating a cold start problem for every new chain or application.

  • Abandons 80%+ of potential users at the wallet funding stage.
  • Forces unsustainable marketing spend on faucets and airdrops.
  • Makes cross-chain expansion a logistical nightmare for apps.
80%+
Drop-off
$10+
Onboarding Tax
02

The Solution: Sponsored Transactions & Paymasters

Let the application pay for user gas, just like web2 apps pay for server costs. This is enabled by ERC-4337 Account Abstraction and protocols like Biconomy, Stackup, and Candide. It transforms gas from a user problem into a growth lever.

  • User pays in any token (e.g., USDC) or with a credit card.
  • Apps can sponsor first 10 transactions or specific actions.
  • Enables gasless onboarding and subscription-based models.
ERC-4337
Standard
0 Gas
For User
03

The Strategy: Intent-Based Relayers

The endgame is intent-based architectures where users declare what they want, not how to do it. Systems like UniswapX, CowSwap, and Across already abstract gas and execution. This allows for batch processing and MEV recapture, turning a cost center into a potential revenue stream.

  • Batch auctions aggregate user intents for ~30% cheaper execution.
  • Relayers compete to fulfill intents, subsidizing costs.
  • Creates a positive-sum flywheel for user growth.
~30%
Cheaper
MEV+
Recaptured
04

The P&L: From Cost Center to Profit Center

Treating gas as a marketing expense with positive ROI is the new playbook. The lifetime value (LTV) of an acquired user far outweighs the ~$0.01 - $0.50 in sponsored gas. This is a fundamental shift in crypto unit economics.

  • CAC (Customer Acquisition Cost) becomes predictable and payable in fiat.
  • Enables freemium models and tiered service levels.
  • Layerzero, Wormhole and other cross-chain infra are building this in natively.
$0.01-$0.50
CAC/User
ROI+
Positive
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