MegaETH Daily Digest — April 26, 2026
At a Glance
- Network→: TPS averaged 25.8, roughly flat vs Saturday (25.9, -0.3%)
- Volume↓: 2.23M total transactions, a small dip vs 2.24M on Apr 25
- Users↑: 4.7K unique wallets, up from 4.3K
- Top app: Ferdy.bet led by transactions (2.1K), while Kumbaya led on breadth (708 unique callers) and gas
- Health: normal
- Signal: sharp, short-lived bursts hit 106.0 TPS and 256.3 Mgas/s, concentrated around World Markets - Exchange and contract 0xdc24…
Sunday, April 26 read like a typical weekend session at the surface—steady throughput, slightly lighter total volume than Saturday, and a healthy uptick in active wallets. Underneath, the day also had a couple of “micro-bursts” (TPS and gas) that didn’t last long, but are worth keeping an eye on in current market conditions.
The Week So Far
The past two weeks have been stable overall, with a clear weekday/weekend rhythm: midweek held the highs (Apr 21 was the busiest day at 28.2 avg TPS), while Saturdays and Sundays consistently dipped back toward the mid‑25s. This weekend was a touch busier than last weekend on average (26.0 vs 25.1 avg TPS), but still firmly in “weekend mode.”
On the transaction side, daily totals have generally stayed in a tight band—roughly 2.1M–2.4M—without the kind of step-change that would imply a new baseline. Unique wallets have been the more interesting signal: after spending much of early April around ~3K–4K, there have been repeated spikes into the 5K+ range (5.3K on Apr 23, 5.8K on Apr 24), and Apr 26 held at 4.7K, which is solid for a Sunday.
Reliability has been quiet at the network level. Since Apr 19, daily failure rates have printed at 0.1% or lower, with Apr 26 at 0.1%—even with a few contract-specific spikes during the day.
The Day
Sunday’s hourly rhythm was mostly flat in the 25–26 TPS zone, with a gentle lift late in the day (27.6 TPS at 22:00 UTC). The standout moments weren’t sustained ramps—they were brief bursts, including a TPS peak to 106.0 at 18:06 UTC and an extreme gas-per-second spike to 256.3 Mgas/s at 19:49 UTC. If you want to dig into those windows, the best starting point is the Insights feed plus a quick scan on the Network Heatmap.
On the app side, activity was concentrated in a familiar mix of GambleFi + DEX + gaming:
- Ferdy.bet led by raw transactions (2.1K txs), but with a relatively small caller set (55 unique). That shape—high repetition from few wallets—often maps to power users or automation rather than broad retail flow.
- Kumbaya was the “wide” app of the day: 1.9K txs, 1,746 Mgas, and 708 unique callers. It also dominated gas among the top DApps list, suggesting more complex execution per transaction than the higher-frequency games.
- Avon posted an interesting footprint for a Sunday: 439 txs with 434 unique callers. That near 1:1 ratio usually means many wallets doing a single action rather than looping behavior.
- Gaming was active but uneven. Crossy Fluffle printed 1.7K txs with only 9 unique callers (highly concentrated), while Intraverse and TopStrike were smaller but more distributed.
The biggest single-contract “story” was the burstiness around World Markets - Exchange and one unidentified high-impact contract:
- World Markets - Exchange saw a high TPS contribution during the 18:06 UTC burst, and later processed 9,978 tx/h around 22:00 UTC. You can inspect it directly here: World Markets - Exchange.
- The extreme gas-per-second spike was attributed primarily to contract 0xdc24cea2ba7b6ed0b54f907087d70aadb99b26ef, which contributed 24.2 Mgas in the flagged window. This looks like a very short, very dense compute event rather than a whole-day shift in usage.
A couple of smaller-but-notable “tempo” spikes also showed up: CommitReveal hit 832 tx/h around 02:00 UTC, and Crossy Fluffle’s activity briefly ran hot around 04:00 UTC.
Health Check
Network-wide reliability remained clean: 2.23M transactions with 1.6K failed (0.1%). Nothing about Apr 26 suggests systemic instability.
The main health flag was localized: World Markets - Exchange recorded a 24.8% failure rate spike around 07:00 UTC (537 of 2,162 failed). Given the day’s later activity bursts on the same contract, this pattern is consistent with bots competing for execution, race conditions, or deliberate contract-level gating/rate-limits—not necessarily a user-facing outage. Still, it’s worth monitoring if these spikes become regular rather than event-driven.
The Takeaway
April 26 was a steady Sunday for MegaETH—flat TPS, slightly softer transaction volume, and a meaningful bump in unique wallets. The real signal was the pair of short-lived spikes (TPS and gas) clustered around World Markets - Exchange and contract 0xdc24…, which didn’t move the daily averages much but do hint at increasingly “bursty” automated or strategy-driven usage.
On the Road to TGE, the “Live Mafia Apps” track remains fully complete, but fee momentum still isn’t there yet: no app cleared the $50K/day threshold, and World Markets ($5K) and Kumbaya ($3K) stayed well below it. The USDM supply milestone also remains far off at $63.4M circulating—details here: https://www.megaeth.com/token.