
The End of the Speed Race in Blockchain Infrastructure
Layer 1 blockchain networks are entering a new competitive phase where transaction speed and low fees are no longer sufficient differentiators, according to Mitchell Demeter, CEO of Sonic Labs. In an exclusive interview with crypto.news, Demeter outlined how the blockchain landscape has fundamentally shifted from technical specifications to ecosystem sustainability.
From Technical Specs to Sustainable Business Models
Demeter explains that while speed and cost were critical differentiators during the 2020-2021 bull market, the current environment demands more sophisticated value propositions. “Block space has effectively become commoditized,” he notes. “Now the real battle is: who can attract users, attract builders, and actually keep them. There has to be more of a moat.”
The Shift to Builder Retention Strategies
Since taking over as CEO two months ago, Demeter has spearheaded a strategic pivot at Sonic toward protocol-level changes that create “stickiness” for developers. The company is actively evaluating Ethereum Improvement Proposals (EIPs) that larger networks like Ethereum cannot implement quickly due to their scale and complexity.
EIP-7903: Enabling Complex Applications
One concrete example is EIP-7903, which increases the smart contract size limit beyond the current 49-kilobyte constraint. “Increasing that limit makes it easier to build more complex applications and makes the chain stickier,” Demeter explains, “because it becomes harder for developers to move their entire infrastructure across chains.”
Tokenomics and Value Distribution
Demeter emphasizes that modern blockchain projects must demonstrate clear value capture mechanisms for token holders. “What people want to see now is how on-chain activity translates into real value creation, value capture, and the return of value to token holders,” he states.
Redesigning Fee Models for Long-Term Value
Sonic is transitioning from its current fee distribution model, which allocates 90% to builders and 10% to validators, toward a more balanced approach. The new sliding-scale model would allocate approximately 15% to builders, 10% to validators, with the remainder burned to create token scarcity.
Competitive Positioning Against Ethereum and Layer 2s
Demeter sees significant advantages for independent Layer 1 networks compared to Ethereum-dependent Layer 2 solutions. “Layer 2s are ultimately dependent on Ethereum. They rely on Ethereum’s base layer,” he notes. “We have our own network and our own distributed validator set. That gives us more flexibility and lets us move faster when it comes to protocol changes and experimentation.”
The Future of Blockchain Business Models
Looking ahead, Demeter believes the industry is moving away from pure speculation toward sustainable business fundamentals. “We’re moving through a transition,” he observes. “Liquidity has tightened, investors are more sophisticated, and builders and users have more optionality. We can’t just rely on narratives anymore. We have to build real businesses.”
The CEO’s immediate priorities include fixing tokenomics, establishing sustainable grant models with venture capital partners, and transforming Sonic from a technology-focused organization into a comprehensive business with robust marketing, communications, and institutional sales capabilities.




