MegaETH Daily Digest — March 28, 2026
At a Glance
- Network↓: TPS averaged 23.5, down 6.1% from March 27 (25.1)
- Volume↓: 2.03M total transactions, down from 2.16M
- Users↓: 2.8K unique wallets, down from 4.5K
- Top app: Kumbaya led with 11.8K txs and 1408 unique callers, edging out Avon
- Health: normal
- Signal: a brief 13:40 UTC burst hit 128.0 TPS and 46.4 Mgas/s, concentrated in World Markets - Exchange
March 28 fit the current weekend cadence: steady, slightly softer than Friday, and well below the mid-week highs from earlier in the month. Even with the calmer baseline, the network still saw a short-lived midday performance spike tied to a single high-activity contract.
The Week So Far
Across the last two weeks, MegaETH has been stable but not accelerating. This week’s average is 24.1 TPS versus 26.3 TPS last week (-8.2%), with the familiar weekend dip largely intact (this weekend averaging 23.2 TPS vs 23.5 TPS last weekend, -1.4%). The biggest outlier remains March 17 (31.7 avg TPS, 56.7 peak), while March 21 was the quietest day at 22.5 avg TPS.
On the adoption side, unique wallets have been choppy and generally lower in the most recent stretch: March 28 landed at 2.8K (down from 4.5K on March 27). Failure rates remain consistently low in the daily view—March 28 printed 0.9%, in line with March 27—nothing that suggests systemic stress.
For a broader read on where activity is clustering, the Insights and Network Heatmap pages are the quickest “what’s actually happening” scan.
The Day
March 28’s hourly rhythm was mostly flat: a long band around ~23–24 TPS, a mild lift around 13:00 UTC (24.6 TPS), then a gentle fade into the late hours. The standout was not sustained load—it was a burst.
DEX + lending dominated the visible app mix. Kumbaya topped the 24h leaderboard with 11.8K txs, 3,411 Mgas, and 1408 unique callers, while Avon followed at 7.8K txs, 2,606 Mgas, and 1345 unique callers. That pairing reads like “routine usage” rather than a one-off event: high caller counts, meaningful gas, and no obvious single-hour cliff.
Gaming activity was more polarized. Crossy Fluffle still did 3.8K txs, but with only 13 unique callers—plus an identified spike of 2,279 tx/h around 03:00 UTC. That shape (lots of transactions, few callers) is consistent with automation or scripted play patterns rather than broad user inflow. In contrast, Intraverse (593 txs, 33 callers) and TopStrike (55 txs, 15 callers) looked smaller but more “distributed.”
The most consequential micro-event was the 13:40 UTC performance jump: network TPS hit 128.0 and gas reached 46.4 Mgas/s, and the top contributor in that window was World Markets - Exchange. Over the last 24 hours, that same contract logged 61,181 txs (down -58% vs the prior 24h in the rate-normalized view), yet still produced a concentrated hour around 13:00 UTC with 5,493 tx/h. If you want to inspect the burst directly, start at World Markets - Exchange and pivot out via the Contracts Explorer.
Two smaller, notable edges:
- Ferdy.bet activity picked up (+252% volume vs the previous 24h in the rate-normalized view) and posted 592 txs on the 24h leaderboard—worth watching for whether it persists beyond the weekend.
- GMX was tiny by tx count (59) but heavy by gas (345 Mgas), making it one of the more gas-dense entries of the day.
Health Check
Network health looked clean. March 28 recorded 0.9% failed transactions (18.0K failed out of 2.03M total), matching March 27’s 0.9% and staying well inside “normal” territory for MegaETH’s current regime.
The one item to monitor is spikiness: the brief jump to 128.0 TPS / 46.4 Mgas/s was extreme relative to the 24h baseline percentiles noted in the alerts (3.3 TPS and 1.2 Mgas/s P95 for that period). That said, a short, contract-concentrated burst is often consistent with automated bursts, parameter changes, or time-based strategies—and doesn’t, by itself, imply degraded user experience.
The Takeaway
March 28 was a typical quieter Saturday: lower TPS, lower volume, and a noticeable dip in unique wallets, but with stable failure rates and no broad signs of stress. The day’s real signal was concentration—one contract, World Markets - Exchange, drove an outsized midday burst despite overall volume trending down in the 24h comparison.
On the TGE front, nothing materially moved: “Live Mafia Apps” remains 5/10, and no apps were near the $50K/day streak requirement (total fees across all apps were $15K). If weekend activity consolidates into sustained, high-fee days for multiple apps, that’s the lever to watch on the Road to TGE rather than raw transaction volume.