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Blog

Why Creator-First Blockchains Will Outcompete General-Purpose Ones

A technical analysis of why specialized chains with native asset primitives, predictable costs, and integrated tooling are the inevitable infrastructure for the trillion-dollar creator and gaming economy.

introduction
THE ARCHITECTURAL MISMATCH

Introduction

General-purpose blockchains are failing creators by optimizing for generic transactions, not creator-specific economies.

General-purpose chains are inefficient. They treat a creator's NFT mint, a DeFi swap, and a governance vote as computationally identical, forcing creators to subsidize infrastructure for unrelated use cases. This creates a fee structure misaligned with creator revenue models.

Vertical integration wins. A blockchain designed for creators, like Avalanche Subnets or Polygon Supernets, can hardcode native features for royalties, social graphs, and content storage (e.g., Arweave, IPFS). This eliminates the need for bulky, expensive smart contracts that Ethereum mainnet requires.

The data proves specialization. Solana gained traction with NFTs and consumer apps by optimizing for high-throughput, low-cost transactions—a creator-first economic model. Meanwhile, Ethereum L1 activity is dominated by DeFi, pushing creators to higher-cost, secondary status.

thesis-statement
THE ARCHITECTURAL IMPERATIVE

The Core Argument: Specialization Wins

General-purpose blockchains are collapsing under the weight of their own complexity, creating an unassailable moat for verticalized, creator-first networks.

General-purpose chains are collapsing under the weight of their own complexity. Optimizing for every use case forces a one-size-fits-all consensus, bloated virtual machines, and fragmented liquidity that degrades performance for all.

Specialization enables radical optimization. A creator-first chain like Aptos or Solana can hardcode native asset standards, deploy purpose-built VMs for media, and integrate Crossmint or Livepeer directly into the protocol layer, eliminating redundant abstraction.

The performance gap becomes structural. A verticalized chain dedicates 100% of its block space and state to a single domain, while Ethereum L2s like Arbitrum or Optimism must arbitrate between DeFi, gaming, and social apps, creating constant contention.

Evidence: The dominance of app-specific rollups (dYdX, Lyra) in DeFi proves the model. They achieve lower latency and higher throughput by shedding the overhead of supporting unrelated applications, a pattern that will repeat for creators.

ARCHITECTURAL TRADE-OFFS

Infrastructure Showdown: General-Purpose vs. Creator-First

A first-principles comparison of blockchain design philosophies for application deployment, focusing on the inherent constraints of general-purpose L1s/L2s versus specialized chains optimized for creator economies.

Core Architectural FeatureGeneral-Purpose L1/L2 (e.g., Ethereum, Arbitrum, Solana)Creator-First Appchain (e.g., Base, zkSync Hyperchains)Creator-First L3/Sovereign Rollup (e.g., Degen Chain, Aevo)

Primary Design Goal

Maximize security & decentralization for all use cases

Optimize UX & economics for a specific application vertical

Maximize sovereignty & fee capture for a single application

State Bloat Tax on Users

High (All apps share global state cost)

Medium (Shared within vertical, subsidized by sequencer)

Low (App pays for its own state, can subsidize users)

MEV Capture & Redistribution

Complex, requires external solutions (e.g., Flashbots, CowSwap)

Native via custom sequencer (e.g., Base's PBS to Optimism Collective)

Full control by app operator, can be returned to users/creators

Gas Token Economics

Extractive (Value accrues to L1 validators/L2 sequencer)

Recirculative (Fees can be directed to app treasury/community)

App-Captive (100% of fees accrue to app, can be burned or redistributed)

Upgrade Flexibility & Forkability

Governance slow, hard forks contentious

Controlled by core dev team, faster iteration

Sovereign. Team can fork the chain's rules unilaterally.

Time-to-Market for New Primitives

12 months (EIP process, client coordination)

3-6 months (Can deploy custom precompiles/opcodes)

< 1 month (Full stack control, no upstream dependencies)

Cross-Domain Composability Cost

High (Bridging latency 1-20 min, fees 0.1-1%)

Medium (Native L2->L2 via shared bridge, < 1 min)

Variable (Depends on parent chain, often higher latency)

Security Source & Cost

L1 Security (Pays ~10-20% of revenue as tribute)

Parent Chain Security (Pays ~5-15% as tribute)

Parent Chain or Validator Set (Cost scales with app revenue)

protocol-spotlight
VERTICALIZATION IS WINNING

Protocol Spotlight: The New Stack

General-purpose chains are becoming commodity infrastructure. The next wave of adoption will be driven by chains optimized for specific user behaviors and economic models.

01

The Problem: The Creator Economy Tax

On general-purpose L1s like Ethereum, creators pay ~2-5% platform fees to marketplaces and high, volatile gas fees for every mint, trade, and interaction. This kills microtransactions and community-driven models.

  • Solution: Chains like Avalanche (for gaming) or dedicated app-chains bake creator economics into the protocol layer.
  • Result: Sub-cent transaction fees enable new models like fractionalized collectibles and continuous royalties.
>95%
Fee Reduction
$0.001
Avg. TX Cost
02

The Solution: Custom VM > General VM

EVM/SVM compatibility is a starting point, not an endgame. Creator-first chains optimize their virtual machine for specific data types and state transitions.

  • Example: A music NFT chain's VM could natively handle streaming rights, split payments, and time-based access.
  • Benefit: This enables ~500ms finality for social interactions and complex logic impossible on general-purpose VMs.
10x
Execution Speed
Native Features
No Plugins Needed
03

The Model: Aligned Incentives > Extractable Value

General chains capture value via base-layer fees (MEV, gas), creating misalignment with top-tier apps. Creator chains flip this: protocol revenue is shared with the community and top creators.

  • Mechanism: A portion of sequencer fees or inflation is directed to a creator fund governed by token holders.
  • Precedent: This mirrors how Axie Infinity built Ronin to capture value for its ecosystem, not for Ethereum validators.
100%
Fee Capture
DAO-Governed
Revenue Pool
04

The Precedent: Gaming Chains Show the Way

Immutable zkEVM, Ronin, and Arbitrum Orbit chains prove verticalization works. They offer custom gas currencies, subsidized transactions, and tailored data availability.

  • Data Point: Ronin processes ~15M daily transactions with sub-second finality, dwarfing most general-purpose chains.
  • Takeaway: The stack (Rollup-as-a-Service from AltLayer, Caldera) now lets any community spin up a chain in weeks.
15M
Daily TX
<1s
Finality
05

The Stack: Sovereignty via Modular Design

Creator chains aren't monolithic. They use modular components (Celestia for DA, EigenLayer for security, AltLayer for rollups) to specialize.

  • Control: They choose their own sequencer, prover, and data availability layer to optimize for cost and speed.
  • Result: Escape the "one-size-fits-all" compromise of shared block space, enabling ~$0 gas for fans and deterministic performance for creators.
Modular
Architecture
~$0
User Gas
06

The Endgame: Culture as a Network Effect

The strongest moat isn't tech—it's culture. A chain dedicated to a creator community (e.g., Krause House's basketball chain) becomes a coordination layer for shared identity and capital.

  • Advantage: This creates sticky, composable ecosystems where social and financial graphs are native primitives.
  • Contrast: This is unattainable on Solana or Ethereum L2s, where your community is just another app competing for blockspace with memecoins.
Cultural Moat
Defensibility
Native Social
Primitives
counter-argument
THE FALLACY

Counter-Argument: The Liquidity & Composability Trap

The assumed network effects of general-purpose chains are a trap that fragments and commoditizes the very value they promise.

General-purpose chains fragment liquidity. Every new L2 or appchain drains TVL from the mainnet, creating a liquidity archipelago. This forces protocols to deploy everywhere, increasing overhead and diluting capital efficiency. The result is a zero-sum liquidity war.

Composability is a broken promise. Cross-chain communication via LayerZero or Axelar introduces latency, cost, and security risk. Atomic composability across a dozen chains is a fantasy; the reality is a fragile web of trust-minimized bridges.

Creator-first chains optimize for flow. A gaming chain like Immutable zkEVM or a social chain like Farcaster Frames internalizes value. Native assets, fees, and user sessions stay on-chain, creating a self-reinforcing economic loop that general-purpose chains leak.

Evidence: The Solana DeFi ecosystem demonstrates this. Its monolithic design enables sub-second composability between Jupiter, Raydium, and MarginFi, creating a liquidity flywheel that fragmented L2s struggle to replicate.

takeaways
WHY SPECIALIZATION WINS

Key Takeaways for Builders and Investors

General-purpose L1s and L2s are becoming commodity infrastructure. The next wave of value accrual is in application-specific chains optimized for creator economies.

01

The Problem: The General-Purpose Tax

Building a social app on Ethereum or Solana means competing for block space with DeFi MEV bots and NFT mints. This creates unpredictable costs and poor user experience for non-financial use cases.\n- Gas spikes during popular mints break creator monetization models.\n- Shared state bloat forces all apps to subsidize storage for others.

1000x
Cost Variance
-99%
Predictability
02

The Solution: Sovereign Economic Policy

A creator-first chain like Avalanche Subnet or Cosmos App-Chain lets you define your own fee token, validator set, and block space rules. This enables native monetization and custom governance.\n- Fee abstraction allows users to pay with social tokens, not just ETH.\n- Priority ordering ensures creator transactions are never front-run.

Custom
Tokenomics
~500ms
Finality
03

The MoAT: Vertical Data Availability

The real defensibility isn't the chain, but the proprietary social graph and creator content stored on its data layer. This creates a data network effect that general chains cannot replicate.\n- Native indexing provides sub-second queries for social feeds.\n- Portable reputation becomes a chain-specific asset, increasing stickiness.

10x
Query Speed
$0
Data Rent
04

The Play: Invest in the Stack, Not Just Apps

The infrastructure enabling these chains—Celestia for modular DA, EigenLayer for shared security, AltLayer for RaaS—will capture more value than any single app-chain. Builders should leverage these primitives.\n- Rapid deployment via Rollup-as-a-Service in <1 hour.\n- Plug-and-play security slashes bootstrap costs by >90%.

<1 Hour
Deploy Time
-90%
Bootstrap Cost
05

The Risk: Liquidity Fragmentation

A chain for every app creates isolated liquidity pools and poor cross-chain UX. The winning stacks will have native interoperability solved at the protocol level, not via third-party bridges.\n- IBC (Cosmos) and Hyperlane enable secure, permissionless composability.\n- Shared sequencers like Astria provide atomic cross-rollup transactions.

<2s
IBC Latency
$0.01
Bridge Cost
06

The Metric: Cost-Per-Engaged-User (CPEU)

Forget TVL. The killer metric for creator chains is Cost-Per-Engaged-User. This measures the infrastructure cost to support a daily active, transacting user. General-purpose L2s have a CPEU 100x higher than optimized app-chains.\n- Sub-cent transactions enable micro-tipping and new business models.\n- Predictable scaling allows precise unit economics for growth.

$0.001
Target CPEU
100x
Efficiency Gain
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Why Creator-First Blockchains Will Outcompete General-Purpose Ones | ChainScore Blog