Polymarket Team Member Claims L2 is on the Way

Polymarket is gearing up for a major infrastructure leap. A team member's recent claim points to an imminent Layer-2 solution—a move that could slash costs and turbocharge the prediction market platform.
The Scaling Gambit
Ethereum's mainnet, while secure, is notoriously expensive for frequent, small transactions. A dedicated L2 would let Polymarket bypass those crippling gas fees, making micro-bets economically viable. Think pennies instead of dollars just to place a wager.
Why It Matters for Prediction Markets
Speed and cost are everything in fast-moving markets. An L2 doesn't just cut fees; it finalizes trades in seconds, not minutes. That transforms user experience from a clunky bet to a seamless trade. It’s the difference between dial-up and broadband for financial speculation.
The Bigger Picture
This isn't just a tech upgrade—it's a strategic land grab. By owning its scaling solution, Polymarket insulates itself from network congestion and positions itself as a liquidity hub. Other platforms stuck on expensive layers will bleed users. It’s a classic case of build the highway, collect the toll.
One cynical finance jab? Wall Street spends millions on research for an edge; crypto just builds a faster casino and lets the crowd bet on the outcome. Sometimes the most efficient market is the one where everyone is guessing.
The countdown begins. If the team delivers, Polymarket isn't just launching a new feature—it's firing the starting gun on the next phase of decentralized prediction markets.
Polymarket team member claims L2 is on the way
According to posts on X, the issues that caused the crash of Polymarket have been resolved, with both the site and related functions resolved.
While Polygon was experiencing the downtime, users who tried to log in were greeted with the message, “Polymarket is down… Oops…we didn’t forecast this.” Then it advised users to reload the page.
According to Downdetector, there was a sharp spike in Polymarket-related problem reports, with 86% of users flagging website issues, 11% reporting login troubles, and 3% noting “website test not starting.”
The surge in reports was significantly above normal levels, which is why Downdetector’s incident alert was triggered.
At the time, user reports and network telemetry indicated the outage was linked to a major Cloudflare disruption affecting routing and content delivery across multiple regions. Such outages usually impact large swaths of the internet, given the company’s role in DNS, CDN, and edge-network infrastructure.
To prevent this from happening again, the team has been working hard on making improvements that will ensure the constant stability of the platform.
In fact, some community members have been told that after the repeated network issues, Polymarket has decided to treat the development of its own L2 as a current priority. The claim was made by a team member named Mustafa in their official Discord channels to reassure users, but there were no specific plans or timeline.
He called it the “#1” priority and claimed it WOULD happen very soon, so they could achieve the required stability and independence.
The approach makes sense. After all, a custom L2 would guarantee total control over infrastructure, reducing the risks of similar downtime happening again. The speculation about creating an L2 has also been happening among community members for quite some time and ties in to their talks about the $POLY token and an airdrop.
Did Polygon PoS report a bug?
The technical hiccup Polygon’s PoS network faced this week, which saw some of its nodes affected, caused only a few delays for users. Polymarket appears to have suffered the most, which is not surprising, given that the platform has been the dominant driver of activity on the network.
According to a post from The Polygon Foundation shared on X, it did not take the team long to find the bug and release a patch that allowed functionality to return fully.
Validators are currently syncing, and the network is gradually building to achieve the required quorum. Still, there have been partial disruptions in RPC services, although the FLOW of transactions has not been interrupted.
The disruption primarily affected Bor, Polygon’s block-producing and transaction execution layer. Polygon admitted that multiple nodes did stall, impacting RPC availability across several providers. The team also claimed that the block producer was still operational and blocks are still being produced, “meaning the chain itself remains live.”
A war room was reportedly even activated to coordinate mitigation, and updates were shared continuously to keep users informed.
This incident is not isolated either. There have been earlier RPC-related slowdowns like the one that occurred on December 12, when Polygon noted that some transactions appeared stuck or missing.
“We are currently investigating an issue where some transactions may appear stuck or missing,” the team wrote. “If you are affected, please try resubmitting the transaction with a gas price that is at least 10% higher than the currently stuck transaction. Once the resubmitted transaction is processed, any remaining pending transactions should be picked up automatically.”
On December 13, they implemented a fix and started monitoring results.
A similar episode occurred in September when certain Bor and Erigon nodes delayed block finality by several minutes. This affected some validators and providers who experienced temporary interruptions, even though checkpoint validation kept up with the expected ranges.
Fixes by the Polygon team have since been introduced among all validators and service providers.
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