Base creator Jesse Pollak says he is stepping back from running the Base App after acknowledging what he called a “wrong bet” on the role social products would play in the network’s growth. I
Base creator Jesse Pollak says he is stepping back from running the Base App after acknowledging what he called a “wrong bet” on the role social products would play in the network’s growth. In a Wednesday post on X, Pollak argued that Base’s push toward creator and content tooling failed to deliver the traction needed in areas that markets now reward more strongly—particularly trading activity.
Pollak said Base has since been behind “scaled competitors” in key financial categories, even as it continued to promote prediction markets and perpetuals. He also indicated he will return leadership of the Base App to Coinbase under Jordan Fish (known on X as “Cobie”) while focusing on Base’s underlying blockchain.
Key takeaways
- Jesse Pollak is stepping back from leadership of the Base App, citing a “wrong bet” on social-led adoption.
- Pollak says Base fell behind in prediction markets and perpetuals versus larger competitors, despite having native options.
- Dune Analytics data cited by Pollak shows Base-native prediction market Limitless represented just 0.5% of total monthly prediction-market notional volume in July.
- DefiLlama rankings cited in the post place Base perpetual DEX Avantis at 18th by reported 30-day notional trading volume.
- Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong previously acknowledged that “content coins” “didn’t work,” aligning with Base’s earlier shift away from social incentives.
Pollak’s admission: social momentum didn’t translate into market leadership
Pollak’s message frames the Base App leadership change as a course correction. He said he had expected creator, content, and messaging applications to drive adoption, but instead the market “disintegrated completely.” While the exact scope of that “disintegration” wasn’t detailed, Pollak specifically pointed to performance gaps in trading-heavy segments.
He highlighted that Base has perps (citing Avantis) and prediction markets (citing Limitless), yet both were “well behind” competitors that have scaled further. This is a notable change in tone from an earlier strategy that positioned Base around social primitives and engagement—an angle Pollak says ultimately didn’t produce the kind of durable demand Base needed.
What the on-chain data suggests about Base’s prediction and perps
To support his argument, Pollak pointed to analytics and ranking sources. According to Dune Analytics data he shared, Limitless accounted for 0.5% of total monthly notional volume across prediction markets in July. The implication is that while Limitless exists as a Base-native option, it has not yet achieved comparable share versus alternative venues that dominate prediction-market activity.
On perpetual trading, Pollak referenced DefiLlama data to claim that Avantis ranked 18th by reported 30-day notional trading volume. Put differently, Base’s derivatives presence appears smaller in relative terms than top competitors, reinforcing Pollak’s point that Base’s financial products were not matched by the scale the broader market expects.
For investors and builders tracking L2 competition, this matters because activity in prediction markets and perpetuals is often a proxy for “real” economic usage: liquidity depth, trading frequency, and the composability of DeFi interfaces. Base’s social push may have generated engagement in some form, but Pollak’s own framing suggests the network is now prioritizing where it can win measurable market share.
Base’s earlier pivot away from social incentives
Pollak’s post arrives in the context of changes Base and Coinbase discussed earlier in the year. The article notes that Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong acknowledged content coins “didn’t work,” and said, “We messed up, time to turn the page,” on Monday. While Armstrong’s comments were broader than just Base App operations, they echo the same underlying theme: strategies built around content-driven incentives did not produce sustained results.
In February, Base sunset its Creator Rewards program and the Farcaster-powered social feed as part of a broader strategic shift toward tradable assets. Pollak previously described the Base App as an “imperfect Farcaster client,” and the Creator Rewards initiative—launched in July 2025—was designed to turn social activity and engagement into earnings.
With Pollak now stepping back from the Base App leadership role, the latest move reads less like a surprise and more like the next step in a process: a social-first direction was tried, incentive mechanics were adjusted or removed, and Base increasingly framed its growth around finance and trading primitives.
In his Wednesday post, Pollak said he intends to continue focusing on the Base blockchain while handing Base App leadership back to Coinbase under Jordan Fish. That division of responsibilities signals a longer-term bet on the chain’s core infrastructure rather than on a single consumer interface.
Recent Base product work referenced in the source supports that direction. Last week, Base activated its B20 token standard on mainnet, described as introducing a native framework for stablecoins, tokenized real-world assets (RWAs), and other fungible tokens. In May, Base launched Base MCP (Model Context Protocol), which allows users to manage crypto directly from an AI model’s chat interface and interact with protocols including Morpho, Moonwell, Uniswap, Aerodrome, Avantis, Bankr, and Virtuals. Earlier in April, Base also pointed to system upgrades aimed at preparing for an AI agent economy, tied to a 2026 roadmap emphasizing stablecoins, prediction markets, and RWA tokenization.
Pollak summarized the intent behind these efforts by saying Base aims to become the blockchain for global finance and the place where the world’s money settles over the next century. Whether that ambition translates into competitive leadership will likely hinge on the same metrics Pollak cited: whether Base’s financial venues can pull liquidity and trading volume at scale, not just whether new standards and agent tooling ship.
Readers should watch how Base responds to the quantified gaps Pollak highlighted—particularly whether Limitless and Avantis can improve their share of prediction and perp volume—and whether Base App leadership changes under Coinbase translate into a clearer, more measurable product strategy.
This article was originally published as Base Creator Jesse Pollak Steps Back After Wrong Social Adoption Bets on Crypto Breaking News – your trusted source for crypto news, Bitcoin news, and blockchain updates.