Key Highlights
- Base creator Jesse Pollak admitted the network’s heavy focus on social and creator coins was a mistake.
- He said Base is now prioritizing trading, payments, and AI agents as its three core growth pillars.
- Pollak acknowledged Base fell behind in key sectors, including perpetuals, prediction markets, tokenization, and enterprise payments
Base creator Jesse Pollak has publicly acknowledged that the network’s aggressive push into onchain social applications and creator coins failed to deliver the next wave of crypto adoption, calling the first quarter of 2026 “a punch in the face.”
In a detailed X post on Wednesday, Pollak reflected on Base’s strategy over the past two years, admitting that while the network correctly bet on builders driving crypto adoption, it misjudged which applications would matter most.
He added that the struggles of projects centered on social experiences, including creator coins, Farcaster, Zora, and Mini Apps, forced the team to rethink its priorities.
“I was wrong… whether it was timing wrong or fully wrong, only time will tell, but regardless, I was definitely wrong,” he wrote.
Why the social bet failed
Pollak’s comments come just days after Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong acknowledged that the company’s content coin strategy had fallen short, saying Coinbase would pivot toward areas showing stronger real-world demand. The move signaled the company’s growing emphasis on financial infrastructure rather than creator-focused social products.
Pollak’s latest statement suggests Base is now aligning with that broader direction. Rather than pursuing viral social experiences, the network will focus on becoming an infrastructure for global onchain finance.
What’s next for Base
Pollak said Base will now organize its roadmap around three primary pillars: trading, payments, and AI agents. According to him, future growth will come from making financial assets easier to access onchain rather than attempting to recreate social media on blockchain rails.
He said trading will encompass virtually every tokenized asset category, including tokenized stocks, meme coins, application tokens, and other digital assets. Payments, meanwhile, will center on global adoption of stablecoins by both consumers and enterprises.
Artificial intelligence represents the third pillar. Pollak said, “Crypto is native money for computers, and artificial intelligence is going to create trillions of new economic actors.”
Back to the blockchain
Pollak also said he has stepped back from leading the Base App to focus exclusively on developing the Base blockchain.
According to Pollak, responsibility for the app has returned to Coinbase, with crypto investor Cobie taking over its development. He said his focus is now on the blockchain itself, pointing to recent upgrades such as Azul, Beryl, privacy features, and ledger improvements.
Despite acknowledging that some strategic decisions had not worked as intended, Pollak said Base would continue prioritizing its developer ecosystem.
He said the network’s growth had been driven by builders and that Coinbase would continue supporting them through initiatives such as Base Layer, Base Batches, the Base Ecosystem Fund, and broader distribution across Coinbase’s products.
Looking beyond creator coins
Pollak closed the post by acknowledging he had been wrong about the emphasis placed on creator coins, while saying experimentation would remain part of Base’s approach.
Although he recognized the challenges the ecosystem has faced in recent months, he pointed to growth in decentralized exchange market share and payment volumes as signs that the network’s current focus is beginning to show results.
He said Base will now concentrate on areas such as tokenized assets, stablecoin payments, and AI-powered financial applications, reflecting what he sees as the next stage of crypto adoption.
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