Updated

MegaETH Daily Digest — March 26, 2026

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

At a Glance


MegaETH activity on March 26 stayed in the “steady mid-20s TPS” lane, continuing a quieter week relative to last. The headline wasn’t sustained throughput—it was a couple of sharp, seconds-long spikes tied to specific contracts, while the rest of the day remained orderly. In broader risk-off market conditions, the chain’s usage looks stable rather than expanding aggressively.

TPS — Last 14 Days222426283032Mar 12Mar 14Mar 16Mar 18Mar 20Mar 22Mar 24Mar 26
TPS — Last 14 Days

The Week So Far

Over the last two weeks, MegaETH has settled into a consistent cadence: weekday activity tends to hold in the mid-to-high 20s TPS, with a familiar weekend dip (Mar 21 was the quietest at 22.5 avg TPS). This week’s average (23.8 TPS) is running below last week (26.7 TPS, -11.1%), even though the last 7 days are broadly stable (+4.3%).

On the “actual network usage” side (daily totals), transactions have been hovering around the low 2M range most days this week (e.g., 2.04M–2.16M from Mar 20–Mar 23), with March 26 ticking up to 2.10M. Unique wallets remain the more notable story: after a prolonged stretch around ~3–5K (Mar 20–Mar 25), March 26 lifted to 4.2K—still modest versus earlier spikes in the month, but directionally healthier for organic participation.

Failure rates have stayed low and unremarkable across this stretch (generally ~0.0%–1.3% since Mar 14), which is what you want to see when activity is driven by a mix of apps rather than a single congestive event.

The Day

March 26 was mostly flat, with a mild morning lift and a steady afternoon: hourly TPS ranged from 22.7 (04:00 UTC) to 25.8 (08:00 UTC), then oscillated in a tight band through the 13:00–20:00 window.

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

Within the app layer, Crossy Fluffle dominated the tracked leaderboard with 25.2K txs and 2,477 Mgas (156 unique callers), a large step up (+579% vs its previous 24h window). That jump also lined up with the day’s most extreme gas micro-burst: network gas briefly peaked at 227.4 Mgas/s at 09:07 UTC, with Crossy Fluffle contributing 32.8 Mgas in that window. If you’re digging into what happened at the contract level, start here: https://miniblocks.io/contracts/0xa30a04b433999d1b20e528429ca31749c7a59098

DeFi user activity was more broadly distributed than raw tx counts suggest. Kumbaya (DEX) posted 6.6K txs but a much wider footprint at 1,477 unique callers (1,920 Mgas): https://miniblocks.io/dapps/kumbaya. Avon (lending) was similar—4.4K txs, 1,445 unique callers, and 1,472 Mgas—suggesting routine user flows rather than one-off batching: https://miniblocks.io/dapps/avon. In contrast, smaller venues like Canonic (947 txs, 5 unique callers) looked more concentrated.

Gaming/gamble flows were present but not disorderly. Ferdy.bet ran 3.5K txs (1,154 Mgas, 180 unique callers): https://miniblocks.io/dapps/ferdybet. TopStrike was small in absolute terms (284 txs) but notable for momentum (+121% vs its prior 24h window), worth keeping an eye on if that trajectory persists into the weekend: https://miniblocks.io/dapps/topstrike.

The other standout came from NFT infrastructure: OpenSea - SeaDrop surged (+5367% vs prior 24h window) to 820 txs and was the top contributor to a seconds-long network TPS peak of 167.0 TPS at 16:01 UTC (630 tx in that spike window). That signature looks like a time-bounded mint/claim-style burst (often bot-heavy), not a sustained demand shift: https://miniblocks.io/contracts/0x00005ea12886e54be34e2cc57d095c25e492f8ca

Top DApps — 24h TransactionsCrossy Fluffle25.2KKumbaya6.6KAvon4.4KFerdy.bet3.5KCanonic947Showdown462Intraverse349TopStrike284
Top DApps — 24h Transactions

Health Check

Network health was clean on March 26: 0.3% failed transactions (6.7K failed out of 2.10M). That’s a slight step up from the 0% reading on Mar 25, but still firmly in the “normal noise” range.

The only operational wrinkle was volatility at very short time scales: the 167.0 TPS and 227.4 Mgas/s peaks were extreme versus the 24h baselines referenced in the automated insights, but they didn’t translate into an elevated daily failure rate. Spikes like this are commonly explained by event mechanics (mints/drops) and automation competing in narrow windows, rather than systemic issues.

The Takeaway

March 26 was a steady throughput day (24.3 TPS) with improving participation (4.2K unique wallets) and low friction (0.3% failures), punctuated by two brief contract-driven bursts (SeaDrop for TPS, Crossy Fluffle for gas). The broader picture remains “stable but subdued” relative to last week, with most growth showing up as short-lived app events rather than sustained network acceleration.

On the Road to TGE, activity clustered around already-qualified apps (Kumbaya, Avon, Showdown), but there was no fees milestone progress: no app cleared $50K/day, and total fees were $16K. The USDM track remains early at 12% ($61.9M circulating; $20.0M deposited). Reference: https://www.megaeth.com/token

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.
2026-03-25