NEW YORK, NY, December 23, 2025 /24-7PressRelease/ — It used to be simple: Layer 1 was base infrastructure, and Layer 2 was the scaling solution. Ethereum was the foundation. Arbitrum, Optimism, and others built the scaffolding. But in late 2025, that clarity is collapsing under the weight of competitive marketing—and the lines are getting intentionally blurred.
Protocols are no longer just building on Ethereum—they’re rebranding entirely. Welcome to the great Layer 2 identity crisis.
The Naming Game
The latest entrant in the semantic shuffle is zkSync, which now calls itself a “Layer 1.5” platform—still leveraging Ethereum security but adding execution complexity with recursive zero-knowledge proofs. It’s technically clever, but the branding? Confusing on purpose.
StarkWare, meanwhile, is positioning itself as more “Ethereum-native” than Ethereum itself. Meanwhile, Celestia, a modular data availability layer, sidesteps the whole argument with the tagline: “We’re not a rollup. We’re a revolution.”
It’s all posturing, but it’s not pointless.
Why It Matters
The fight over Layer 2 vs Layer 1.5 vs modular stack isn’t just a branding spat—it’s a reflection of where real adoption might land. Institutional partners, app developers, and liquidity providers want to know where to place their bets. And for that, semantics can shape perception, and perception shapes investment.
Hayden Adams, founder of Uniswap, recently commented, “Every new naming convention is a narrative layer on top of a tech layer. That’s not bad—it’s how people onboard.”
That’s the crux: onboarding. If your platform is too complicated to explain in one sentence, you’re losing capital. So calling something a Layer 2—even if it technically isn’t—can be the difference between $5 million in grants and 5 confused validators.
What Comes Next
Expect the branding arms race to intensify. “Hyperchains,” “execution shards,” and “settlement hubs” are all creeping into crypto vocabulary, not because users demanded clarity—but because protocols need narrative edge.
It’s a game of attention. And in 2025, attention flows to whatever sounds fastest, cheapest, and most Ethereum-aligned.
The Bottom Line
While the devs argue about opcodes and proof types, the market is choosing based on vibes. L2s are eating the world—but nobody agrees on what an L2 even is anymore.
And maybe that’s the point. In crypto, definition is power. And right now, everyone’s trying to redefine the stack just enough to sit at the top of it.
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