Gate Square “Creator Certification Incentive Program” — Recruiting Outstanding Creators!
Join now, share quality content, and compete for over $10,000 in monthly rewards.
How to Apply:
1️⃣ Open the App → Tap [Square] at the bottom → Click your [avatar] in the top right.
2️⃣ Tap [Get Certified], submit your application, and wait for approval.
Apply Now: https://www.gate.com/questionnaire/7159
Token rewards, exclusive Gate merch, and traffic exposure await you!
Details: https://www.gate.com/announcements/article/47889
In EcoCity, Trexx is a useful case for understanding why sovereign L1s are making a return.\n\nTrexx is building a system centered on onchain trade execution rather than a simple application frontend. Its core requirement is not broader ecosystem compatibility, but full control over execution paths, fee structures, and the cadence of state updates.\n\nIn a shared rollup environment, the main constraint Trexx faces is unpredictability.\n\nCompetition for block space means execution order, latency, and costs can all be influenced by external applications. For any system built around trading or matching, this becomes a structural risk.\n\nEven if the underlying performance is fast, without control over execution, a team cannot take responsibility for user experience or risk models. By deploying a sovereign L1 within EcoCity, Trexx is effectively separating its execution engine from shared environments.\n\nThrough the orchestration layer provided by @TanssiNetwork, Trexx does not need to bootstrap its own validator set or manage full operational infrastructure to gain dedicated block space. This allows the team to focus on execution logic rather than infrastructure management.\n\nEcoCity’s rolling launch model also makes Trexx’s status transparent. Which features are live onchain, which are still in testing, and which remain design assumptions can be assessed through real interaction via LFD rather than marketing narratives.\n\nThis mode of discovery itself represents a correction to the way application chains are typically framed.