Around $400 million in Ether (ETH) has been taken out of the Ethereum layer-2 network Blast after the launch of its mainnet on Feb. 29 at 9:00 pm UTC — unlocking nearly $2.3 billion in staked crypto previously locked up on the network.
The optimistic rollup blockchain scaler gives users up to 5% annual percentage yield on Ether and stablecoins held on the network generated from staked ETH and United States Treasury Bills (T-Bills) managed by blockchain protocol and Dai (DAI) stablecoin creator MakerDAO.
Crypto sent to the network was locked in before the mainnet launch, giving its 180,000 users no way to withdraw sent funds until now.
Blast’s total value locked (TVL) saw a high of $2.27 billion on Feb. 29, which has now fallen 17.5% to $1.87 billion after the launch with just under $400 million withdrawn, according to DeFiLlama data.
The network had passed its $2 billion TVL milestone for the first time days earlier on Feb. 27.
Airdrop hunters have flocked to the blockchain, farming it in hopes to be cut in on a Blast token the team has said is coming in May.
Blast’s launch has come with controversy, too.
Dan Robinson, research head at Blast seed investor Paradigm wrote in a November X post that the venture firm didn’t agree with Blast’s decision to “launch the bridge before the L2, or not to allow withdrawals for three months” believing it "sets a bad precedent for other projects."
There are a lot of components of Blast that I’m excited about and would be interested in engaging with people on. That said, we at Paradigm think the announcement this week crossed lines in both messaging and execution. For example, we don’t agree with the decision to launch the…
— Dan Robinson (@danrobinson) November 26, 2023
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“We also think much of the marketing cheapens the work of a serious team,” Robinson added. “We don’t endorse these kinds of tactics.”
The network has already seen its first alleged exit scam on Feb. 26 when a gambling protocol called “Risk on Blast” took off with 420 ETH — around $1.25 million worth at the time — of user funds it collected for its marketed RISK presale token.
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