Updated

MegaETH Daily Digest — March 22, 2026

Daily Transactions — 4 Weeks2.0M2.5M3.0M3.5M4.0MFeb 22Feb 26Mar 2Mar 6Mar 10Mar 14Mar 18Mar 22
Daily Transactions — 4 Weeks
Unique Wallets — 4 Weeks020K40K60K80KFeb 22Feb 26Mar 2Mar 6Mar 10Mar 14Mar 18Mar 22
Unique Wallets — 4 Weeks

At a Glance


MegaETH stayed in its softer weekend regime on Sunday, March 22: steady throughput, low day-to-day volatility, and a continued step-down versus earlier in the month. Against a risk-off backdrop in broader market sentiment, the chain looked calm at the network level—while still seeing a few sharp, contract-driven bursts worth flagging.

TPS — Last 14 Days2530354045Mar 8Mar 10Mar 12Mar 14Mar 16Mar 18Mar 20Mar 22
TPS — Last 14 Days

The Week So Far

The last 7 days have continued to cool off (activity down -14.9% over the period), and the week-over-week comparison is clear: this week is averaging 26.3 TPS versus 32.6 TPS last week (-19.5%). Weekends have shifted the most: this weekend averaged 23.1 TPS versus 33.0 TPS last weekend (-29.9%), a meaningful drop in “background” activity.

On the transactions-and-users side, Sunday, March 22 posted 2.02M transactions—slightly higher than Saturday’s 1.95M—while unique wallets stayed compressed at 3.7K, near the bottom of the last month’s range. The contrast to early March remains stark (e.g., 73.7K unique wallets on March 8), suggesting current usage is being carried more by repeat/automated flows than broad participation. For broader context across the network, the main views to keep an eye on are the https://miniblocks.io/dashboard and https://miniblocks.io/analytics.html.

The Day

Sunday’s hourly rhythm was mostly flat: after a small bump into 00:00 UTC (26.5 TPS), the day held a tight band around ~22.6–23.7 TPS for most hours, then picked up again late (25.2–25.1 TPS at 21:00–22:00 UTC). Average gas tracked similarly (6.6–6.9 Mgas/s), consistent with a quiet weekend baseline.

TPS — Today Hourly2324252600:0003:0006:0009:0012:0015:0018:0021:0022:00
TPS — Today Hourly

App activity at the top of the board was led by Kumbaya (9.9K txs, 2,688 Mgas, 2,297 unique callers): solid breadth for a Sunday, and it’s also one of the currently qualified “Live Mafia Apps” in the Road to TGE program (see https://www.megaeth.com/token). Avon was the clear #2 by volume and usage—2.9K txs and 1,060 unique callers—standing out as one of the day’s more organic-looking user clusters: https://miniblocks.io/dapps/avon.

Behind them, the leaderboard mix leaned game-heavy but with very uneven caller distribution—high transactions with very few callers is usually automation or a small number of power users:

Ferdy.bet was the notable mover: multiple detectors flagged +112% and +118% volume vs the prior 24h windows, and it landed at 1.4K txs with 60 unique callers on the day. Whether that’s a feature moment or more automated play, it’s a real step-up versus its immediate baseline: https://miniblocks.io/dapps/ferdybet.

Finally, the biggest “mechanical” story of March 22 was not a dapp-page leader—it was World Markets - Exchange. It was the top contributor in several short windows, including a network TPS peak of 50.0 TPS (Mar 22 21:05 UTC) and a gas spike to 176.4 Mgas/s (Mar 22 14:43 UTC), plus a contract-level volume jump to 98,735 txs over 24h. If you want to trace the bursts, start at the contract page and work outward via the https://miniblocks.io/insights and https://miniblocks.io/network-heatmap.html.

Top DApps — 24h TransactionsKumbaya9.9KAvon2.9KCrossy Fluffle2.3KFerdy.bet1.4KCanonic1.1KTopStrike922Intraverse718Showdown437
Top DApps — 24h Transactions

Health Check

At the network level, March 22 was clean: 0.2% failed transactions (4.3K failed out of 2.02M total), continuing a low-error stretch over the last several days.

The one caveat was localized: World Markets - Exchange saw a failure-rate spike to 12.2% around 22:00 UTC (1,232 of 10,087 failed) versus a 1.1% baseline. That pattern is often consistent with bursty competition dynamics (bots racing, tight timing windows, or intentional reverts under rate/condition checks), rather than a broad network reliability issue—especially given the overall chain failure rate stayed near-zero.

The Takeaway

Sunday, March 22 was a steady low-activity day: 23.4 TPS, 2.02M transactions, and 3.7K unique wallets—quiet, with no network-wide health concerns. The day’s real signal was concentration: a few apps (notably Kumbaya and Avon) carried most visible user activity, while World Markets - Exchange produced the sharpest short-lived spikes and the only meaningful failure pocket.

On the TGE watch (https://www.megaeth.com/token), nothing materially advanced: no app cleared the $50K/day fee threshold, and Kumbaya’s fees (9K) improved versus March 21 (5K) but remain well below the sustained target—still useful as a directional datapoint when paired with its continued top-of-board usage.

Data sources: Analysis by MiniBlocks.io using on-chain MegaETH data. Market sentiment data from Alternative.me Crypto Fear & Greed Index. TVL and stablecoin data from DeFiLlama. TGE progress from megaeth.com.

Curious how this digest is made? Read about our AI-powered methodology.
This report is generated automatically by AI and may contain errors or inaccuracies. It is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice. MiniBlocks is an independent analytics platform and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or promoting any project mentioned. Always verify data independently and do your own research.
About failure rates: This report covers raw network-level metrics. High failure rates for a contract or DApp do not necessarily indicate poor app quality. Common causes include bot activity (front-running, sniping), race conditions during launches and mints, intentional access gating, and rate-limiting mechanisms that deliberately reject excess transactions.
2026-03-21