
Avalanche Network User Activity Skyrockets in 2025
Boosted by a wave of Web3 gaming projects drawing mass participation, the platform has also processed roughly 5.2 million transactions in the past week—an increase of over 110 % week‑on‑week. Projects such as MapleStory Universe and The Arena have been credited with driving substantial growth, addressing both gaming and DeFi audiences.
The immediate spike traces back to April, when daily active addresses bottomed near 430 k before accelerating sharply in May. By early June, daily active wallets exceeded 100,000 on Avalanche's C‑Chain—levels not seen since the 2021 all‑time‑high phase. Token Terminal and Artemis data mirror this trend, showing monthly active wallets ballooning to 2.2 million—a 400 % rise since May.
Industry analysts attribute the surge to several factors. User sentiment on Reddit highlights optimism: 'This is only the beginning; we are early. Once Avalanche is tested and proven, it will gain mass adoption. Enjoy the maturation process,' one user posted, reflecting broader confidence in the network's trajectory. Institutional interest is also entering the fray: blockchain analytics firm Wu Blockchain noted that institutional tools like BlackRock's tokenised Treasury products are being adopted on Avalanche's Euler protocol as collateral.
ADVERTISEMENT
Infrastructure upgrades have complemented growing ecosystem demand. Avalanche has embraced modular Subnet architecture, enabling specialised chains tailored for gaming and niche applications within its ecosystem. This flexibility, combined with low fees and sub‑second finality, is seen as critical in attracting developers and business interest.
Yet, despite record‑breaking user activity, AVAX token price has remained subdued. Trading near US $20–$22, the coin is down more than 60 % from its late‑2024 highs. Market watchers interpret this as a classic disconnect: on‑chain metrics up, price down—a potential accumulation window if fundamentals continue to strengthen.
Notably, spikes in stablecoin issuance—from about US $1.6 billion to over US $2.1 billion—and rising DeFi usage have complemented the on‑chain resurgence. However, decentralized exchange volumes have not kept pace, with daily DEX transaction volumes dipping despite higher transactional throughput.
Experts suggest that continued momentum will hinge on sustaining ecosystem activity and translating it effectively into token utility and value. Infrastructure improvements and new partner integrations—such as FIFA's NFT launch on Avalanche—add further credibility.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The National
3 hours ago
- The National
The Trump-Putin summit shows why Europe needs to continue re-arming itself
Much store has been placed over the past eight months in how foreign leaders prepare to interact with US President Donald Trump. From a European point of view, there has been a carousel of winners and losers. Take, for example, a write-up in The Wall Street Journal of the golfing prowess of Finnish President Alexander Stubb and how that was key to the relationship between the two men. UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer would have enjoyed the headline on Monday that said he was hoping to 'exploit his curious relationship' with the US leader to the benefit of Ukraine. Mr Trump appears to enjoy it all. Going back to his first term and the notorious handshaking with French President Emmanuel Macron, Mr Trump sees meeting European leaders as a kind of vaudeville performance. At the start of this week, he was boasting that Monday's White House gathering on Ukraine was a big day in history. 'Never had so many European Leaders at one time. My great honour to host them!!!' Step back from all the stage management, and the reality is that Mr Trump and the new American political establishment see the Europeans as all one, not the individual performers that the news reports highlight. The war in Ukraine appears to have reached the moment of truth. By abandoning demands for a ceasefire as a gateway to peace talks during his Alaska summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin, Mr Trump has established how the conflict can now end. For the Europeans, this means the transactional basis of US foreign policy going forward is a fundamental reality that cannot be wished away anymore. Nor even blunted by the kind of summit theatrics we have seen over recent months. The Europeans must now follow through on the generational change the continent's leaders have promised on its collective defence. This means all nations need to match the kind of uplift that Germany has promised. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz arrived at the White House on Monday having promised to raise defence spending to 3.5 per cent of national gross domestic product by 2029. It also means that leaders must be more ruthless in the dollars versus euros choices that the Europeans are making when buying defence equipment. Put simply, to defend itself Europe must now more aggressively buy European as a long-term strategic play. The third aspect of this is that the Europeans must show they are prepared to join in delivering what it takes to be robust in their own self-defence. That is why I describe this as a generational choice. It is surely true that the defence spending must go back to levels last seen during the Cold War. But it is also true that the population must be mobilised in civil defence and formal security roles in new and wider ways. The war in Ukraine has already changed the trajectory of the European story. A decade that started with the Covid-19 pandemic has seen its growth and prosperity derailed by the subsequent decoupling from Russia. This isn't just in terms of the cost of living, which was severely hit by the resources shock following the war. The wider outlook for the continent is also one of beleaguered choices between welfare and warfare with no real prospect of an economic revival. It is not just Ukraine that is a frontline state. The Baltics and Scandinavians have that mentality, too. Alliances have been formed such as the 10-nation Joint Expeditionary Force, which stretches from Iceland through the UK to those northern frontline states. Most European countries are on a trajectory to higher government spending, but the reforms in the security mentality are not yet as real as the scale of the challenge that the continent is facing. The retired British general Richard Barrons observed last week that no one was talking about a Russian invasion of the UK as a credible prospect, but he queried the readiness for a more wholistic threat landscape. This includes strengthening the digital sphere in the information age. A society mobilised to take on these challenges is clearly just as vital as strong defences in Finland or elsewhere. For now, the Europeans will seek to eke out as much of a security blanket from the US as they can feasibly obtain. That is why the cast at the White House on Monday was not just Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy but also included Mr Starmer, Mr Macron, Mr Merz, Mr Stubb, plus Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. It would be a fool's paradise, however, to not see the writing on the wall. When the Signal chat involving American leaders was leaked during Washington's confrontation with Yemen's Houthis, Vice President JD Vance was shown asking why the US was bailing out European security. The intervention across the Red Sea was quickly curtailed. France has long argued that at least two thirds of the coming European military build-up should be manufactured at home. Vulnerabilities of ordering from the US include long lead times and a de-prioritisation of the European inventory rebuild in areas such as ammunition. Other European countries openly push for the high-capability requirements on offer from the US. This pushes the longer-term restructuring of the continent's defence industries into the long grass. So while orders are flowing from a top-line increase in defence budgets, it is hard to shake the questions around adequacy. Not only is the spending rising as fast as pledged but also can Europe become strong enough, faster? The answer to that question won't be found in this week's trip to Washington.


Khaleej Times
3 hours ago
- Khaleej Times
Nearly 90% of videogame developers use AI agents, Google study shows
A Google Cloud survey showed that 87% of videogame developers are using artificial intelligence agents to streamline and automate tasks, as the industry focuses on optimizing costs following a wave of record layoffs. Most of the respondents in the report, published on Monday, said AI was helping automate cumbersome and repetitive tasks, freeing developers to focus on more creative concerns. Gaming publishers have turned to AI to deal with the industry-wide challenge of ballooning development costs and elongated creation cycles stemming from high fan expectations and intense competition. The study, conducted by Google and The Harris Poll, surveyed 615 game developers in the U.S., South Korea, Norway, Finland, and Sweden in late June and early July. Around 44% of developers use agents to optimiae content and process information such as text, voice, code, audio and video rapidly, enabling them to exercise autonomy and make decisions, the study showed. But the use of AI in videogames is a highly contentious topic, with many within the industry concerned over potential job losses, intellectual property disputes and lower pay. Last year, Hollywood's videogame performers went on strike over AI and pay issues, while studios shut down and more than 10,000 people lost their jobs. The industry is expected to gain momentum this year and the next, with the launch of premium titles and new consoles seen to boost spending. According to the survey, 94% of developers expect AI to reduce overall development costs in the long term. That, even as roughly one in four developers find it challenging to precisely measure the return on investment of their AI implementations, while costs associated with integrating the technology are also high. Around 63% of those surveyed expressed concerns over data ownership as the legality around licensing and who exactly owns AI-generated content remains unclear.


Zawya
4 hours ago
- Zawya
Soybeans, corn fall on China demand worries, US crop tour awaited
HAMBURG - Chicago soybean and corn futures fell on Monday, pressured by favourable U.S. weather and concerns over low export demand as trade tensions between the U.S. and top buyer China continued. Expectations a closely-watched crop tour in the United States this week will boost expectations of large U.S. corn harvest also weakened corn. Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT) most active soybeans fell 0.5% to $10.37-1/4 per bushel at 1110 GMT. Corn fell 0.5% to $4.03 a bushel. Wheat fell 0.4% to $5.24-1/2 a bushel. 'Weather in the U.S. Midwest continues to be favourable for soybeans, with sunshine this week set to help crops reach their finishing line,' said Matt Ammermann, StoneX commodity risk manager. 'U.S. new crop soybean export sales are exceptionally slow, and there is still no news about any U.S.-China trade deal to generate Chinese buying of U.S. soybeans.' 'The whole growing season has been nearly perfect for U.S. corn and it continues to be so.' U.S. President Donald Trump last week urged China to quadruple its soybean purchases, but news was lacking about progress in U.S.-China trade talks, while U.S. soybean exporters are missing out on China sales. Traders are awaiting estimates from this week's Pro Farmer Midwest U.S. crop tour, which will estimate corn yields and gauge soybean production potential across seven U.S. states after forecasts by the U.S. agriculture department last week of a record-large U.S. corn crop. 'Wheat remains lower on the outlook for large world supplies which will be seeking buyers, with U.S. export sales still pretty impressive but even more demand is needed at current prices," Ammermann said. "The EU and Black Sea are also likely to intensify competition to U.S. wheat in export markets soon.'