MegaETH Daily Digest — March 30, 2026
At a Glance
- Network↑: 25.2 TPS average, up +6.5% from Sunday (23.7)
- Volume↑: 2.17M total transactions, up from 2.05M
- Users↑: 4.3K unique wallets, up from 2.9K
- Top app: Crossy Fluffle led with 70.2K txs and a sharp hourly spike (~24,672 tx/h around 05:00 UTC)
- Health: 1.1% failed transactions (24.1K of 2.17M) — slightly elevated vs Sunday, still broadly clean
- Signal: two microbursts stood out — 148.0 TPS tied to 0x4912481115e9c54c258b025186b54c255d7a5883, and 399.6 Mgas/s driven by World Markets - Exchange
Monday activity on March 30 looked like a normal “weekday bounce” off the weekend lull: more transactions, more unique wallets, and slightly higher average throughput. Under cautious broader market conditions, usage stayed steady overall, but a couple of contracts created very sharp, short-lived bursts in TPS and gas.
The Week So Far
MegaETH has been stable over the past week, but not especially busy: this week’s average is 24.2 TPS, below last week’s 26.3 TPS (-8.1%). The weekend dip pattern is still intact, and this weekend was only marginally higher than the prior one (23.6 vs 23.0 avg TPS).
On “real activity” metrics, daily network volume has mostly held in the ~2.0M–2.2M range since March 20, with March 30 coming in at 2.17M. Unique wallets remain in the low single-thousands compared to early-March highs, but March 30 did show a clean rebound to 4.3K from the weekend’s 2.8K–2.9K range.
One ecosystem datapoint worth noting: TVL stepped up to $105.2M on March 30 (up from $96.7M on March 29 in the 14-day series). That kind of jump often shows up alongside heavier DeFi usage, and it matches the day’s gas-heavy bursts around exchange activity.
The Day
Throughput was steady in the mid‑20s TPS for most of March 30, with one clear early spike to 30.9 TPS at 05:00 UTC, then a gradual drift back toward ~24 TPS into the late evening. The bigger story was that the day’s “spikiness” came from brief microbursts that don’t show up in hourly averages.
Crossy Fluffle dominated app-level volume: 70.2K txs, 6,886 Mgas, and 420 unique callers on the 24h leaderboard (Crossy Fluffle). That surge aligns with the detected app spike (~24,672 tx/h around 05:00 UTC) and also shows up directly on the core contract (MegaETH - Crossy Fluffle). The scale suggests either a concentrated gameplay loop burst, automation, or a mix of both—worth a quick look at the per-method breakdown in the Insights feed.
Outside gaming, Avon stood out for breadth: 2.8K txs but 1,271 unique callers (Avon), which is one of the strongest “distinct users” signals on the board. Kumbaya remained active with 3.5K txs and 909 unique callers (Kumbaya), but its volume was flagged as down versus the prior window—consistent with users rotating or bots backing off rather than a network-wide slowdown.
Two smaller but notable moves:
- TopStrike jumped to 3.1K txs with only 30 unique callers (TopStrike)—a pattern that can indicate a feature push or automated traffic.
- GMX posted just 670 txs but consumed 1,226 Mgas (GMX), making it one of the more gas-dense entries on the day.
On the contract side, two addresses are worth explicitly bookmarking in the explorer:
- A new, bursty contract, 0x4912481115e9c54c258b025186b54c255d7a5883, was linked to the day’s TPS microburst (peaking at 148.0 TPS at 19:34 UTC) and logged 2.3K+ transactions with activity concentrated into a few hours (0x4912481115e9c54c258b025186b54c255d7a5883).
- 0x00000000006687982678b03100b9bdc8be440814 rose to 673 txs (+933% vs the prior window), which is small in absolute terms but a clear relative jump (0x00000000006687982678b03100b9bdc8be440814).
Health Check
At the network level, March 30 was fine: 1.1% failed transactions (24.1K of 2.17M). That’s higher than Sunday’s 0.3%, but still within a “nothing alarming” band for broad usage.
The main reliability flags were contract-specific:
- World Markets - Exchange (0x5e3ae52eba0f9740364bd5dd39738e1336086a8b) drove the gas microburst (peak 399.6 Mgas/s at 11:27 UTC) and later saw a failure spike to 43.6% around 20:00 UTC (2,306 of 5,292 failed) (World Markets - Exchange).
- The new burst contract 0x4912481115e9c54c258b025186b54c255d7a5883 also ran at a ~42% failure rate during its peak window.
These patterns often come from bots competing for execution, launch-style guardrails, or race conditions around trading/position updates—not necessarily user-facing breakage. Still, they’re the two spots to watch most closely if elevated failures persist.
The Takeaway
March 30 was a modest step up from the weekend on all the core “day” metrics—25.2 TPS, 2.17M transactions, and 4.3K unique wallets—while activity stayed concentrated in a handful of apps and a couple of spiky contracts. Crossy Fluffle provided the clearest volume impulse, while DeFi showed up more through gas intensity and the TVL jump than through raw transaction counts.
On TGE tracking, the day didn’t move the fee-based milestone meaningfully: Cap logged $12K and Kumbaya $5K, with $17K total fees across all apps—still 0/3 apps above $50K on March 30. With USDM progress at $62.2M circulating (and $98.4M stablecoin supply on-chain), the throughline remains the same: usage is there, but converting it into sustained per-app fees (or much larger stablecoin scale) is the gating factor (megaeth.com/token).