Here's something wild about Ethereum rollups that most people miss: they're basically running on a single-threaded EVM. Every transaction? Fighting for space in one massive queue. Zero room for parallel execution.
Think about it. When one dApp goes crazy with traffic, the entire network crawls. That's the bottleneck nobody talks about.
Eclipse flips this model. They're plugging Solana's Virtual Machine straight into Ethereum's ecosystem. Different apps get their own processing lanes now. High-traffic protocols can't choke out smaller ones anymore—everyone gets breathing room.
It's like switching from a single checkout line at the grocery store to having dedicated express lanes. The infrastructure just scales differently when transactions aren't all elbowing each other for attention.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
14 Likes
Reward
14
5
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
SatoshiLeftOnRead
· 10h ago
Wait, is the single-threaded EVM issue really that serious? It feels like every day someone is saying that Rollups are doomed.
View OriginalReply0
TestnetFreeloader
· 12-02 07:03
The idea of ngl eclipse is indeed brilliant, the issue of single-thread bottlenecks should have been solved a long time ago.
View OriginalReply0
WalletInspector
· 12-02 07:03
The single-threaded EVM is really amazing; when a large investor goes crazy, everyone else has to suffer. This design is a bit absurd.
View OriginalReply0
GasFeeLady
· 12-02 06:51
ngl the single-threaded bottleneck hits different when you're watching gwei spike at 3am... eclipse's parallel lanes actually sound legit for once tho
Reply0
RugResistant
· 12-02 06:49
analyzed thoroughly... single-threaded bottleneck angle checks out, but ngl the eclipse SVM integration needs way more scrutiny. potential exploit vectors hiding in that cross-chain messaging layer, fr fr
Here's something wild about Ethereum rollups that most people miss: they're basically running on a single-threaded EVM. Every transaction? Fighting for space in one massive queue. Zero room for parallel execution.
Think about it. When one dApp goes crazy with traffic, the entire network crawls. That's the bottleneck nobody talks about.
Eclipse flips this model. They're plugging Solana's Virtual Machine straight into Ethereum's ecosystem. Different apps get their own processing lanes now. High-traffic protocols can't choke out smaller ones anymore—everyone gets breathing room.
It's like switching from a single checkout line at the grocery store to having dedicated express lanes. The infrastructure just scales differently when transactions aren't all elbowing each other for attention.