The proliferation of Ordinal-like transactions of PRC-20 tokens seems to have pushed gasoline charges on Polygon (MATIC), an Ethereum (ETH) layer-2 community, to yearly highs.
Whereas the community charges have since receded to earlier lows, information from livdir.com reveals that the typical gasoline payment peaked at over 5,000 Gwei on Nov. 16.
Knowledge from Polygonscan additional corroborates this, displaying that the community customers spent roughly $131,000, or 155,000 MATIC, on gasoline charges throughout the interval. This marked the best quantity Polygon customers have spent on gasoline charges since November final 12 months.
Sandeep Nailwal, Polygon’s founder, famous this development and described the elevated gasoline charges as “loopy.” In response to him, the community labored easily regardless of gasoline charges going amid the 6 million transactions recorded in 24 hours at a mean of 170 transactions per second.
PRC-20 POLS token
In the meantime, the rise in Polygon’s charges coincided with elevated minting actions of the “PRC-20” token known as POLS.
Dune Analytics information, curated by SatsX, reveals that the whole quantity of POLS tokens minted stands at 2.1 quadrillions as of press time. Per the dashboard, these minting actions resulted in spending over 102 million MATIC, valued at roughly $86.7 million, in transaction charges.
The POLS tokens make the most of the PRC-20 protocol, leveraging transactional ‘calldata’ on the Polygon blockchain. These tokens resemble Bitcoin Ordinals’ BRC-20 tokens, facilitating the era of NFT-like belongings inside the community.
Apparently, the payment surge on Polygon mirrors related traits noticed on the Bitcoin (BTC) community when Ordinals got here to the fore.
CryptoSlate just lately reported {that a} resurgence within the recognition of those Ordinals pushed BTC transaction charges to a six-month excessive.
Equally, Ordinals contributed to elevated transactions on Litecoin’s (LTC) community, though its transaction charges didn’t considerably surge like different networks.