MegaETH Daily Digest — April 03, 2026
At a Glance
- Network↓: 24.5 TPS average on Friday, down from Thursday’s 26.1 TPS (-6.2%)
- Volume↓: 2.11M total transactions, down from 2.25M on Apr 02
- Users↓: 3.3K unique wallets, down from 3.8K on Apr 02
- Top app: Crossy Fluffle led by transactions (3.7K), but at a much lower pace than the prior 24h (-74%)
- Health: normal (0.6% failed network-wide)
- Signal: sharp, isolated performance bursts tied to World Markets - Exchange, including 169.0 TPS peak and a localized failure spike
MegaETH stayed in its recent “steady but not overheated” regime this week: baseline activity remained consistent even as broader market conditions stayed risk-off. Friday eased off Thursday’s stronger pace, but the day still featured a couple of short, very sharp bursts concentrated in one contract.
The Week So Far
Over the last couple weeks, MegaETH has been holding a stable lane: this week’s average sits at 25.0 TPS, slightly above last week’s 24.0 TPS (+4.3%). The pattern still looks familiar—weekends dip (23.6 TPS last weekend vs 23.0 TPS the prior one), while weekdays cluster in the mid‑20s.
The busiest day in the last 14 days was Tuesday, Mar 31 at 26.2 TPS average (31.6 peak), while the quietest was Saturday, Mar 21 at 22.5 TPS. On the adoption side, unique wallets have been range-bound in recent days (generally 2.8K–4.5K), and Apr 03 came in softer at 3.3K.
The Day
Friday, Apr 03 was mostly even throughout the day—hours were tightly clustered around the mid‑20s TPS, with a brief lift around midday (27.1 TPS at 12:00 UTC) and a gentle fade into the late hours (down to ~23–24 TPS from 17:00–21:00 UTC). The headline, though, was not the baseline; it was the short-lived spikes layered on top of it.
The largest “event” signatures were tied to World Markets - Exchange. The network registered a 169.0 TPS peak at 12:30 UTC (with World Markets - Exchange contributing 930 transactions in that window). Earlier, network gas spiked to 263.8 Mgas/s at 08:58 UTC (World Markets - Exchange: 13.4 Mgas in that window). There was also a contract-level throughput burst to 11,758 tx/h around 12:00 UTC—38% above its own P95. Net: the chain’s “shape” was calm, but a single venue intermittently pushed hard enough to create visible bursts in performance telemetry.
Among the 24h DApp leaderboard, activity was led by games and a few DeFi surfaces:
- Crossy Fluffle posted 3.7K transactions (367 Mgas) but only 11 unique callers, and it was flagged as down sharply versus the prior 24h (26,297 → 3,739 rate-normalized). That reads like automated activity cooling off more than a broad user exodus.
- Ferdy.bet stood out for momentum: 1.5K transactions and 522 Mgas with 49 unique callers, plus two separate “growth” detections showing +160% (343 → 968 tx) and +183% (32 → 112 tx) depending on the measurement window (RPC gaps make these slices directionally useful, not perfectly comparable).
- Kumbaya looked like one of the more organic-feeling flows: 1.3K transactions, 377 Mgas, and 574 unique callers—high breadth even if per-user intensity wasn’t extreme.
- Avon also showed broad participation (777 txs, 257 Mgas, 442 unique callers), consistent with “many small interactions” rather than one-hot contract spamming.
- GMX was low in transaction count (134) but heavy in gas (459 Mgas), suggesting fewer, more expensive interactions.
One smaller contract to keep on watch: 0x955d56f6391a496231509134e0d2beadf82a223f was flagged +649% in volume (25 → 234 tx rate-normalized). If it repeats, it may become a reliable “new activity” marker. See it directly here: https://miniblocks.io/contracts/0x955d56f6391a496231509134e0d2beadf82a223f
Health Check
Network-wide reliability on Apr 03 looked clean: 0.6% failed (12.7K failed of 2.11M total), an improvement from Apr 02’s 0.8%.
The main caveat was localized: World Markets - Exchange saw a failure spike to 25.1% around 11:00 UTC (1,398 of 5,570 failed), about 2 standard deviations above its baseline. Given the simultaneous bursts in TPS/gas and elevated throughput, this pattern is consistent with contention-heavy activity (bots, racing orders, or throttling-style rejections) rather than a chain-wide reliability issue.
The Takeaway
Apr 03 was a lighter-volume Friday (24.5 TPS, 2.11M tx, 3.3K wallets) that still delivered a clear signal: MegaETH’s baseline is steady, but single-contract surges—especially from World Markets - Exchange—can still dominate short windows and create noisy performance and failure-rate artifacts.
On the Road to TGE, nothing materially shifted: no apps cleared the $50K/day threshold (Cap: $14K; Kumbaya: $5K; Prism: $0K), and the “Live Mafia Apps” count stayed at 6/10. If Kumbaya’s broad caller base persists, it’s constructive for real usage, but fee milestones remain the gap to watch. Reference: https://www.megaeth.com/token.