The Ship of Theseus paradox: If you replace every plank of a ship, one by one, is it still the same ship when finished? Sonic, born from Fantom, poses the same question.
In December 2024, @SonicLabs began as an upgrade to Fantom. While maintaining Fantomâs philosophical core, Sonic replaced critical componentsâdatabase architecture, virtual machine, and consensus optimizationsâcreating something that technically shares Fantomâs DNA yet delivers performance that has completely outgrown its predecessor. This transformation raises a few questions. What makes a blockchain truly ânewâ? Is it the code base? The developer team? The token? Or is it the experience and capabilities it offers users? Sonic presents us with the blockchain equivalent of the Ship of Theseus paradoxâif you rebuild a chainâs database, upgrade its VM, and enhance its consensus while keeping its foundational philosophy, at what point does it become an entirely different entity? Sonic took Fantomâs components. It rebuilt them plank by plank. It created something new while honoring Fantomâs legacy. The key changes were â
The result of these changes was that Sonic reached 10k TPS compared to Fantomâs 2k, with ~1 second finality.
This is the theoretical limit. What is actually happening?
Currently, the maximum hourly TPS is ~900, and the average hourly TPS is 14. This is because the demand for Sonicâs blockcspace is simply not there yet. The maximum number of transactions on a day was 1.11 million. For a chain to have a consistent TPS of 10k throughout the day, it needs to have a demand of 864 million transactions. No chain has this demand today.
Theoretical TPS looking for practical demand
Sonic has about 47K daily active addresses, slightly below Berachainâs ~60k. For contrast, Solana has 3.3 million daily active addresses, and Base has 1.7 million as per Token Terminalâs data.
Since the launch, Sonicâs TVL reached $1 billion in ~2 months. Itâs tempting to argue that Fantom was already live, so Sonic had a headstart. But at the time of Sonicâs debut, Fantomâs TVL was just $180 million, and when Sonic hit $1 billion, Fantomâs TVL stood at ~$120 million, showing that migration from Fantom to Sonic was not a major factor.
Aptos and Sui raised more than $300M each, yet Sonic â essentially a Fantom upgrade â blew past them with minimal external funding. In fact, Sonicâs primary âfundingâ came from redirecting existing Fantom resources and incentives, not massive VC rounds.
Numbers render the âjust Fantom migrationâ counter-argument weak. When Sonic launched in December 2024, Fantomâs TVL sat at roughly $180M. Today, Fantom still maintains $160M TVL while Sonic cleared $1B. Simple math shows that over $800M in new capital flowed specifically to Sonic, not from Fantom cannibalization.
Despite having more addresses, Abstract has a lower DEX trading volume. This suggests its users might be doing smaller trades or engaging with activities like games or NFTs.
In contrast, Sonic has fewer users overall, but theyâre generating much higher trading volume. This indicates Sonicâs community is more focused on financial activities.
This difference highlights how the two chains are attracting different types of users:
Source - DefiLlama
Source - DefiLlama
Sonicâs DEX volume is similar to Berachainâs, while Berachain has 3x the TVL. This indicates that Sonicâs capital is more active than Berachainâs.
Source - DefiLlama
I am going to stick to DeFi sectors for this article since thatâs the focus for Sonic.
For Sonic or any DeFi-specific platform, lending protocols represent a critical piece of the stack. Large, well-established platforms like Aave and Compound set the bar for reliability and scale. Aave has already deployed on Sonic. It will be interesting to see how smaller, more Sonic native lending protocols take on giants like Aave to grow their share of the lending market.
Along with the likes of Aave, if Sonic-based lending protocols can achieve even a fraction of the TVLs of chains like Ethereum, it will underscore the chainâs viability for large capital flows.
Staking and liquid staking protocols are central to a chainâs security, liquidity and capital efficiency. They attract and lock capital, providing network stability and generating yields for token holders.
But just staking is not enough. There should be yield markets plugged into staking to make it more attractive. For example, you can stake Sonic ($S) using Beets, and get stS. You can further use this in protocols like Pendle and @StableJack_xyz to earn yield and/or points. The ecosystem is nascent. Major yield protocols like Pendle have moved to Sonic.
DEXs are perhaps the most important component of DeFi. Ultimately, almost every DeFi activity is supported by swaps. Obviously, giants like Uniswap and PancakeSwap are way way ahead of new Sonic native DEXs like @Shadowonsonic.
But by adding a new twist to old mechanics, exchanges like Shadow are creating new ways of attracting capital and volume. Along with the old voting escrow mechanism that allows holders to vote after locking tokens, Shadow directs 100% of the fee revenue to xSHADOW holders. The result is significantly higher revenue for token holders.
With this mechanism, Shadow passed on $4.7 million from $1.3 billion monthly volume to xSHADOW holders. It has the highest holder revenue per volume.
Hyperliquid stands out with an enormous 30-day volume of $202â¯B, paired with a high FDV of $18â¯B. Yet, its FDV/Volume ratio (0.09) remains moderate, suggesting that its valuation is not wildly out of sync with usage.
dYdX has a 30-day volume of $9.5â¯B and an FDV of $488â¯Mâgiving it a lower FDV/Volume ratio (0.05), indicative of an established brand and steady usage.
Derivatives are just getting started on Sonic. Numbers give a sense of how Sonicâs own nascent perp DEXs could evolve. Sonic aims to deliver high throughput and low feesâqualities that are essential for perpetual trading. So far, there are no breakout successes in terms of volume and liquidity. At the same time, the relative success of smaller players like @NaviExSonic shows thereâs room for specialized or niche offerings to thrive if they leverage Sonicâs technical advantages.
Hyperliquid showed us that taking an opinionated stance on a specific niche yields tremendous benefits. By perfecting perpetual futures, theyâve created a benchmark product. Can Sonic follow a similar philosophy but with a broader DeFi vision, recognizing that DeFi extends beyond just perpetual futures?
When I think about standout platforms like Hyperliquid or dYdX, a critical missing element is: seamless integration with the wider DeFi ecosystem. Despite excellence in futures trading, these platforms remain disconnected from lending protocols, options markets and other DeFi primitives.
Our aim with DeFi should always be to enable TradFi-level composability. Imagine seamlessly using the same collateral across futures, options, and lending protocolsâtaking a long position via futures, hedging downside risk through options, and simultaneously earning yield via lending, all within the same integrated ecosystem. Todayâs DeFi landscape dominated by platforms like Hyperliquid or dYdX canât do this. Despite their excellence in execution and liquidity.
No tradfi derivatives venue restricts users to only futures or only options. DeFi has proven it can produce exceptional individual products, but these remain largely siloed. This integration isnât merely about better liquidity â itâs about capital efficiency.
Of course, better capital efficiency means better liquidity and sharper pricing. But to me, DeFi NEEDS to improve capital efficiency because it means more people can participate and express their views on the market. It means we lower the barriers to entry. It means more inclusive markets. Isnât that why we started this whole thing? We set out to dismantle the walls of the financial garden, and better capital efficiency takes us closer to that.
With @AndreCronjeTech as CTO, Sonic has someone who deeply understands financial systems and has built successful financial products on-chain. The teamâs experience, coupled with Sonicâs architecture, creates potential for something fresh in DeFi.
My hope for Sonic is that it evolves into a platform where different DeFi applications blend seamlessly to create a TradFi-equivalent experience â but with the openness and accessibility that only DeFi can provide.
The Ship of Theseus paradox: If you replace every plank of a ship, one by one, is it still the same ship when finished? Sonic, born from Fantom, poses the same question.
In December 2024, @SonicLabs began as an upgrade to Fantom. While maintaining Fantomâs philosophical core, Sonic replaced critical componentsâdatabase architecture, virtual machine, and consensus optimizationsâcreating something that technically shares Fantomâs DNA yet delivers performance that has completely outgrown its predecessor. This transformation raises a few questions. What makes a blockchain truly ânewâ? Is it the code base? The developer team? The token? Or is it the experience and capabilities it offers users? Sonic presents us with the blockchain equivalent of the Ship of Theseus paradoxâif you rebuild a chainâs database, upgrade its VM, and enhance its consensus while keeping its foundational philosophy, at what point does it become an entirely different entity? Sonic took Fantomâs components. It rebuilt them plank by plank. It created something new while honoring Fantomâs legacy. The key changes were â
The result of these changes was that Sonic reached 10k TPS compared to Fantomâs 2k, with ~1 second finality.
This is the theoretical limit. What is actually happening?
Currently, the maximum hourly TPS is ~900, and the average hourly TPS is 14. This is because the demand for Sonicâs blockcspace is simply not there yet. The maximum number of transactions on a day was 1.11 million. For a chain to have a consistent TPS of 10k throughout the day, it needs to have a demand of 864 million transactions. No chain has this demand today.
Theoretical TPS looking for practical demand
Sonic has about 47K daily active addresses, slightly below Berachainâs ~60k. For contrast, Solana has 3.3 million daily active addresses, and Base has 1.7 million as per Token Terminalâs data.
Since the launch, Sonicâs TVL reached $1 billion in ~2 months. Itâs tempting to argue that Fantom was already live, so Sonic had a headstart. But at the time of Sonicâs debut, Fantomâs TVL was just $180 million, and when Sonic hit $1 billion, Fantomâs TVL stood at ~$120 million, showing that migration from Fantom to Sonic was not a major factor.
Aptos and Sui raised more than $300M each, yet Sonic â essentially a Fantom upgrade â blew past them with minimal external funding. In fact, Sonicâs primary âfundingâ came from redirecting existing Fantom resources and incentives, not massive VC rounds.
Numbers render the âjust Fantom migrationâ counter-argument weak. When Sonic launched in December 2024, Fantomâs TVL sat at roughly $180M. Today, Fantom still maintains $160M TVL while Sonic cleared $1B. Simple math shows that over $800M in new capital flowed specifically to Sonic, not from Fantom cannibalization.
Despite having more addresses, Abstract has a lower DEX trading volume. This suggests its users might be doing smaller trades or engaging with activities like games or NFTs.
In contrast, Sonic has fewer users overall, but theyâre generating much higher trading volume. This indicates Sonicâs community is more focused on financial activities.
This difference highlights how the two chains are attracting different types of users:
Source - DefiLlama
Source - DefiLlama
Sonicâs DEX volume is similar to Berachainâs, while Berachain has 3x the TVL. This indicates that Sonicâs capital is more active than Berachainâs.
Source - DefiLlama
I am going to stick to DeFi sectors for this article since thatâs the focus for Sonic.
For Sonic or any DeFi-specific platform, lending protocols represent a critical piece of the stack. Large, well-established platforms like Aave and Compound set the bar for reliability and scale. Aave has already deployed on Sonic. It will be interesting to see how smaller, more Sonic native lending protocols take on giants like Aave to grow their share of the lending market.
Along with the likes of Aave, if Sonic-based lending protocols can achieve even a fraction of the TVLs of chains like Ethereum, it will underscore the chainâs viability for large capital flows.
Staking and liquid staking protocols are central to a chainâs security, liquidity and capital efficiency. They attract and lock capital, providing network stability and generating yields for token holders.
But just staking is not enough. There should be yield markets plugged into staking to make it more attractive. For example, you can stake Sonic ($S) using Beets, and get stS. You can further use this in protocols like Pendle and @StableJack_xyz to earn yield and/or points. The ecosystem is nascent. Major yield protocols like Pendle have moved to Sonic.
DEXs are perhaps the most important component of DeFi. Ultimately, almost every DeFi activity is supported by swaps. Obviously, giants like Uniswap and PancakeSwap are way way ahead of new Sonic native DEXs like @Shadowonsonic.
But by adding a new twist to old mechanics, exchanges like Shadow are creating new ways of attracting capital and volume. Along with the old voting escrow mechanism that allows holders to vote after locking tokens, Shadow directs 100% of the fee revenue to xSHADOW holders. The result is significantly higher revenue for token holders.
With this mechanism, Shadow passed on $4.7 million from $1.3 billion monthly volume to xSHADOW holders. It has the highest holder revenue per volume.
Hyperliquid stands out with an enormous 30-day volume of $202â¯B, paired with a high FDV of $18â¯B. Yet, its FDV/Volume ratio (0.09) remains moderate, suggesting that its valuation is not wildly out of sync with usage.
dYdX has a 30-day volume of $9.5â¯B and an FDV of $488â¯Mâgiving it a lower FDV/Volume ratio (0.05), indicative of an established brand and steady usage.
Derivatives are just getting started on Sonic. Numbers give a sense of how Sonicâs own nascent perp DEXs could evolve. Sonic aims to deliver high throughput and low feesâqualities that are essential for perpetual trading. So far, there are no breakout successes in terms of volume and liquidity. At the same time, the relative success of smaller players like @NaviExSonic shows thereâs room for specialized or niche offerings to thrive if they leverage Sonicâs technical advantages.
Hyperliquid showed us that taking an opinionated stance on a specific niche yields tremendous benefits. By perfecting perpetual futures, theyâve created a benchmark product. Can Sonic follow a similar philosophy but with a broader DeFi vision, recognizing that DeFi extends beyond just perpetual futures?
When I think about standout platforms like Hyperliquid or dYdX, a critical missing element is: seamless integration with the wider DeFi ecosystem. Despite excellence in futures trading, these platforms remain disconnected from lending protocols, options markets and other DeFi primitives.
Our aim with DeFi should always be to enable TradFi-level composability. Imagine seamlessly using the same collateral across futures, options, and lending protocolsâtaking a long position via futures, hedging downside risk through options, and simultaneously earning yield via lending, all within the same integrated ecosystem. Todayâs DeFi landscape dominated by platforms like Hyperliquid or dYdX canât do this. Despite their excellence in execution and liquidity.
No tradfi derivatives venue restricts users to only futures or only options. DeFi has proven it can produce exceptional individual products, but these remain largely siloed. This integration isnât merely about better liquidity â itâs about capital efficiency.
Of course, better capital efficiency means better liquidity and sharper pricing. But to me, DeFi NEEDS to improve capital efficiency because it means more people can participate and express their views on the market. It means we lower the barriers to entry. It means more inclusive markets. Isnât that why we started this whole thing? We set out to dismantle the walls of the financial garden, and better capital efficiency takes us closer to that.
With @AndreCronjeTech as CTO, Sonic has someone who deeply understands financial systems and has built successful financial products on-chain. The teamâs experience, coupled with Sonicâs architecture, creates potential for something fresh in DeFi.
My hope for Sonic is that it evolves into a platform where different DeFi applications blend seamlessly to create a TradFi-equivalent experience â but with the openness and accessibility that only DeFi can provide.