MegaETH Daily Digest — April 07, 2026
At a Glance
- Network↓: TPS averaged 26.8, essentially flat vs April 6 (26.9, -0.2%)
- Volume↑: 2.34M transactions, up from 2.32M
- Users↓: 3.5K unique wallets, down from 3.9K
- Top app: Kumbaya led by activity (12.7K txs, 1,367 unique callers), with Avon close behind (9.8K txs, 1,307 callers)
- Health: normal
- Signal: late-session throughput bursts were outsized—World Markets - Exchange drove a TPS spike (66.0) and an elevated failure pocket (11.0%)
MegaETH stayed in its recent groove on Tuesday, April 7: steady mid-to-high 20s TPS, a small uptick in total transactions, and a noticeable dip in distinct senders. In current market conditions, that “volume up, wallets down” mix reads more like concentrated power users and automation than broad-based new participation.
The Week So Far
Across the last two weeks, MegaETH has looked stable with a mild upward bias: this week’s average throughput (25.6 TPS) is slightly higher than last week (24.5 TPS, +4.4%), while the familiar weekend dip held (this weekend averaged 24.6 TPS vs 23.6 TPS last weekend). The busiest day in the 14-day window remains Monday, April 6 at 26.9 average TPS, with Saturday, March 28 the quietest at 23.5.
On the “real usage” side, daily network volume has been ranging around the low-2M TX band for most of the past two weeks, with the last two days pushing a bit higher: 2.32M on April 6 and 2.34M on April 7. Unique wallets have been more choppy and generally soft—April 7 printed 3.5K, down from 3.9K the day prior—so the week’s growth story is more “heavier usage from fewer actors” than a clean expansion in participation.
The Day
Tuesday’s hourly rhythm was mostly even, with a gentle lift into mid-day and a sharper push late. The day spent many hours in the 25–28 TPS range, popped to 29.7 TPS at 14:00 UTC, and finished with a decisive late spike to 32.8 TPS at 22:00 UTC—plus an even sharper, brief peak flagged at 66.0 TPS at 22:32 UTC.
On the app leaderboard, activity was top-heavy:
- Kumbaya led by transactions and reach: 12.7K txs, 3,903 Mgas, 1,367 unique callers. In the TGE fee tracker, Kumbaya also improved to $6K for April 7 (up from $3K on April 6), aligning with it being the day’s most consistently used venue.
- Avon was the other center of gravity: 9.8K txs, 3,270 Mgas, 1,307 unique callers, and an identified burst of 1,011 tx/h around 08:00 UTC. If you want to drill into where that usage landed, the Avon contract Avon - USDm Yield is at https://miniblocks.io/contracts/0x2ea493384f42d7ea78564f3ef4c86986eab4a890.
- GMX was the gas heavyweight (9,723 Mgas) despite only 1.8K txs and 102 callers—suggesting fewer, more expensive interactions. Detectors also flagged multiple “up vs prior 24h” volume readings for GMX, consistent with a re-activation window rather than a single isolated burst.
Gaming and smaller surfaces were present but thin on unique callers (e.g., Crossy Fluffle: 1.8K txs, 12 callers; Showdown: 397 txs, 1 caller; Prism: 38 txs, 22 callers). Ferdy.bet landed at 594 txs (218 Mgas, 24 callers) and was also flagged as down vs its prior period in detectors—worth watching, but not a network-level driver on this day.
The most notable “mechanical” events were contract-centric:
- A major gas-per-second spike hit 254.4 Mgas/s at 16:56 UTC, attributed primarily to 0x2dfcc7415d89af828cbef005f0d072d8b3f23183 (252.9 Mgas in that window): https://miniblocks.io/contracts/0x2dfcc7415d89af828cbef005f0d072d8b3f23183
- 0x0be268ebb2114c39ca817fff66503d4785ed019a jumped to 1,617 txs (+632% vs its previous 24h): https://miniblocks.io/contracts/0x0be268ebb2114c39ca817fff66503d4785ed019a
- 0x328c38cb445cde29ab50c178186439e080ca0813 spiked to 1,274 tx/h around 16:00 UTC: https://miniblocks.io/contracts/0x328c38cb445cde29ab50c178186439e080ca0813
Health Check
At the network level, April 7 was clean: 0.4% failed TX (9.6K failed out of 2.34M), matching April 6’s 0.4% and staying well below any threshold that would read as systemic.
The main reliability signal was localized to World Markets - Exchange (contract https://miniblocks.io/contracts/0x5e3ae52eba0f9740364bd5dd39738e1336086a8b), which:
- Drove part of the late throughput surge (including a 30,966 tx/h hour around 22:00 UTC and a TPS peak contributor window), and
- Saw a failure spike to 11.0% around 21:00 UTC (1,578 failed of 14,410).
That pattern—high activity + elevated failures in a tight window—often matches automation, competition effects, or deliberate throttling mechanics rather than a broad UX degradation. Still, it’s the one pocket from April 7 that deserves a closer look at call types and revert reasons.
The Takeaway
April 7 extended MegaETH’s steady week: slightly higher total volume, slightly lower unique wallets, and a late-day burst concentrated in a small number of contracts (notably World Markets - Exchange and 0x2dfcc7415d89af828cbef005f0d072d8b3f23183). Nothing in the network-wide failure rate looks alarming, but the contract-level spike at World Markets is a real, time-bounded signal to monitor.
On the Road to TGE, the day’s activity nudged the same levers—Kumbaya’s fees improved to $6K and USDm-related usage rose (MegaETH - USDm flagged at 3,318 txs, +120%)—but the “$50K daily fees per app” criterion remains unmet (0 apps above $50K on April 7). Reference tracking: https://www.megaeth.com/token.