Layer-2 coins
119 coins #40| | Coins | | | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | |||||
| | 1 | | $ | -3.71% | |
| | 2 | | $ | -4.02% | |
| | 3 | | $ | -4.29% | |
| | 4 | | $ | -5.76% | |
| | 5 | | $ | -6.24% | |
| | 6 | | $ | -6.14% | |
| | 7 | | $ | -4.70% | |
| | 8 | | $ | -1.39% | |
| | 9 | | $ | -3.48% | |
| | 10 | | $ | -6.10% | |
| | 11 | | $ | -7.30% | |
| | 12 | | $ | -4.64% | |
| | 13 | | $ | -11.36% | |
| | 14 | | $ | -2.91% | |
| | 15 | | $ | -3.06% | |
| | 16 | | $ | -9.68% | |
| | 17 | | $ | -7.05% | |
| | 18 | | $ | -8.02% | |
| | 19 | | $ | -5.63% | |
| | 20 | | $ | -3.14% | |
| | 21 | | $ | -2.11% | |
| | 22 | | $ | -6.44% | |
| | 23 | | $ | -6.90% | |
| | 24 | | $ | -5.75% | |
| | 25 | | $ | -7.29% | |
| | 26 | | $ | -6.10% | |
| | 27 | | $ | -2.84% | |
| | 28 | | $ | -7.72% | |
| | 29 | | $ | +1.36% | |
| | 30 | | $ | -3.02% | |
| | 31 | | $ | -3.15% | |
| | 32 | | $ | +0.88% | |
| | 33 | | $ | -11.84% | |
| | 34 | | $ | -28.27% | |
| | 35 | | $ | -8.72% | |
| | 36 | | $ | -6.65% | |
| | 37 | | $ | -7.16% | |
| | 38 | | $ | -11.11% | |
| | 39 | | $ | -6.09% | |
| | 40 | | $ | -3.37% | |
| | 41 | | $ | +0.27% | |
| The coins below are ranked lower due to missing data. Learn more | |||||
| | 42 | | $ | +0.64% | |
| | 43 | | $ | -4.70% | |
| | 44 | | $ | +0.26% | |
| | 45 | | $ | -6.25% | |
| | 46 | | $ | -7.84% | |
| | 47 | | $ | --% | |
| | 48 | | $ | --% | |
| | 49 | | $ | --% | |
| | 50 | | $ | --% | |
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Trending Layer-2 coins
| Coins | Price | 24h | |
|---|---|---|---|
| | | $ | -3.71% |
| | | $ | -11.36% |
| | | $ | -1.39% |
| | | $ | -6.14% |
| | | $ | -6.09% |
Top gainers
| Coins | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | $ | +1.36% | ||
| | | $ | +0.88% | ||
| | | $ | +0.27% | ||
| | | $ | -1.39% | ||
| | | $ | -2.11% | ||
| All gainers | |||||
What are Layer-2 Tokens?
Layer-2 tokens are the native coins or governance/utility tokens of Layer-2 networks—separate blockchains that sit on top of Layer-1 chains (like Ethereum or Bitcoin) to boost speed, cut fees, and scale transactions while inheriting L-1 security. Think of L-2 as the “express lane” that bundles traffic before it settles back to the main highway.
Quick Facts
- Purpose: Scale L-1 without changing its core code; reduce gas, increase TPS, keep decentralisation.
- Security: L-2 batches or channels post proofs/data to L-1; if L-2 fails, users can still exit via L-1.
- Gas tokens: Most L-2s pay fees in ETH or BTC, but many issue their own coin for governance, discounts, or staking.
- Types: Rollups (Optimistic & ZK), state channels, sidechains, nested chains, plasma.
- Speed & cost: Typical L-2 gas < $0.01; finality 2–30 seconds vs. 12–600 seconds on L-1.
Major L-2 Token Categories
| Type | How it works | Example coins / chains |
|---|---|---|
| Optimistic Rollups | Assume transactions valid, post fraud proofs after 7 days | OP (Optimism), ARB (Arbitrum), BOBA (Boba), CTSI (Cartesi) |
| ZK Rollups | Bundle + cryptographic proof (SNARK/STARK) posted to L-1 | IMX (Immutable X), LRC (Loopring), MATIC → POL (Polygon zkEVM), STRK (StarkNet) |
| State Channels | Off-chain two-way channel; settle final balance on L-1 | No major tradable coin; Lightning (BTC), Raiden (ETH) use BTC/ETH |
| Sidechains / Nested | Separate chain with own consensus, periodic anchor to L-1 | RON (Ronin), SKL (Skale), GLMR (Moonbeam) |
| Plasma / Validium | Child chains post Merkle roots to L-1, keep data off-chain | OMG (OMG Network), METIS (Metis Andromeda) |
Real-World Examples
- Lightning Network (BTC) – state channel; reduces BTC settlement from 10 min to milliseconds.
- Arbitrum & Optimism (ETH) – optimistic rollups; <$0.10 gas, 2-second finality, TVL > $15 B.
- Immutable X (ETH) – ZK-rollup for NFTs & gaming; gas-free minting, IMX token for fees/rebates.
- StarkNet/StarkEx (ETH) – ZK-STARK rollups; used by dYdX, Immutable, Sorare for high-speed trading.
Benefits
- Cheap & fast – 10–100× lower gas than L-1; 2–30 second finality.
- 24/7 markets – trade, lend, or LP tokens any time vs. traditional market hours.
- Fractional access – own $10 of tokenised T-bills or real estate.
- Transparent ledger – on-chain ownership record reduces fraud and disputes.
- Yield exposure – stake L-2 tokens or provide liquidity for real-world yields.
Risks & Limitations
- Bridge risk – wrapped assets rely on multisig or smart-contract custody.
- Regulatory fog – securities laws differ by country; KYC may be required.
- Liquidity gaps – smaller L-2 tokens can have 10–20 % slippage on large sells.
- Upgrade forks – L-2s can hard-fork; tokenomics may change.
- Indexer reliance – some ZK/optimistic rollups depend on off-chain provers/indexers.
Final Thoughts
Layer-2 tokens give traders cheap gas, fast finality, and exposure to rollup revenue or governance while inheriting L-1 security. Evaluate bridge design, token utility (fee burn, governance, staking), and real user traction before aping. For live prices and volumes, filter Coinranking by “layer-2”.