Unichain empowers UNI by alleviating the negative impacts of MEV through a built-in MEV redistribution mechanism, fast confirmation times, and transparent transaction ordering rules, though it cannot completely eliminate MEV.
Written by: 0XNATALIE
Yesterday, Uniswap announced a partnership with Flashbots to launch Unichain, an Ethereum L2 designed specifically for DeFi. Unichain is an Optimistic Rollup based on OP Stack, aiming to address some of the challenges faced by DeFi. Notably, Uniswap, Flashbots, and Optimism are all backed by investment from Paradigm.
Currently, Ethereum L1 has a block time of 12 seconds, and slow transaction speeds limit user experience. In addition, the MEV issue urgently needs to be addressed. The existing block construction mechanism allows certain participants to gain unfair profits by manipulating transaction order, thereby reducing market efficiency. To tackle these problems, Unichain introduces a 1-second block time and 250-millisecond "Flashblocks," combined with a verifiable priority ordering mechanism and Trusted Execution Environment (TEE), significantly improving transaction speed while increasing the transparency and fairness of transaction ordering, injecting new vitality into the Layer 2 DeFi ecosystem.
This is a new block construction mechanism introduced by Unichain, implemented by Rollup-Boost. It aims to improve the transparency of transaction ordering on the blockchain, reduce unfair MEV extraction, and increase transaction processing speed. The basic idea is to use TEE to execute the block construction process, providing a transparent and trustworthy ordering mechanism. Rollup-Boost is a verifiable block building platform developed by Flashbots to upgrade Rollup performance, optimizing the block construction process through TEE. Unichain is its first real-world application. Rollup-Boost is integrated into Unichain as sidecar software, leveraging its technical features (such as fast confirmation of Flashblocks and verifiable priority ordering) to enhance Unichain's performance and user experience.
The working principle of verifiable block building:
The Unichain Validation Network (UVN) addresses risks in single-sequencer architectures and accelerates economic finality on the blockchain through staking and distributed validation.
UVN consists of multiple nodes, each of which can independently validate the state of blocks, ensuring all transaction records are legitimate and untampered. This prevents block equivocation risk or invalid block risk present in single-sequencer systems, thereby enhancing network security. Operators wishing to become UVN validator nodes must stake UNI tokens on the Ethereum mainnet; nodes with more staked tokens have greater weight and a higher chance of becoming active validator nodes.
Additionally, UVN provides a faster economic finality mechanism by reducing potential delays caused by a single sequencer through parallel validation by multiple nodes. Each validator node confirms the validity of blocks during the validation cycle and publishes validation information to the network, increasing the credibility of the chain's state. Once a block passes validation, these transactions are considered irreversibly completed (i.e., economically final). Validators must validate blocks and publish attestations during each validation cycle, or they will not receive the corresponding rewards.
Ryan Watkins, co-founder of Syncracy Capital, proposed the view that "RollApps are FatApps," believing that the RollApp represented by Unichain has greater control and flexibility, similar to fat applications, with more control and management capabilities over infrastructure, and can better capture the value it creates. He divides application structures into three types and compares their control scope:
Yuki, a researcher at Fenbushi Capital, pointed out that Unichain is not a blockchain (app-chain) designed specifically for a particular application, but rather a general-purpose L2 solution with a built-in MEV redistribution mechanism. However, it still requires some customized mechanisms (such as hooks) to ensure that MEV revenue flows to specific target groups (such as users or liquidity providers).
Researcher Haotian believes that Uniswap's launch of Unichain is not a departure from Ethereum, but rather a further push for the development of the Ethereum L2 ecosystem. The current L2 ecosystem has not yet fully unleashed the vitality of DeFi, and Unichain will act as a catalyst for DeFi expansion. Unlike dYdX and MakerDAO, which have chosen completely independent architectures and consensus mechanisms, Unichain is based on OP Stack and still aligns with Ethereum's Rollup-Centric scaling strategy, while also giving the UNI token more functionality. Unichain will compete with other L2s, helping to boost the overall vitality of the L2 market.
There are also some differing opinions. For example, KOL sudo rm believes that the current scaling strategies ignore the resolution of some core issues. L2s expand network processing capacity, but user security issues have not been effectively addressed. Instead of investing large amounts of funds in L2 development, it would be better to first solve the most basic and fundamental problems in the Ethereum ecosystem, such as user security and attack resistance. KOL Temmy questioned the necessity of Uniswap launching Unichain and is confused about whether more L2 solutions are needed, as he believes the existing L2s are already sufficient. Uniswap's move may lead to further liquidity fragmentation, and if other dApps follow suit, the situation could become worse than expected.