Sophon just made one of the boldest calls in crypto this year. The Sophon Pivot shuts down its own Layer 2 chain completely and moves the entire project onto Base, betting that apps matter more than owning a chain.Â

Source: Official AnnouncementÂ
The team announced the Layer 2 Decommission on June 25, 2026, confirming it will wind down its ZK-powered Layer 2 network built on the zkSync stack.Â
The team had raised $60 million for this project, and running the chain alone cost between $3 million and $3.4 million every year in infrastructure and tooling.
That spending didn't translate into anything unique for users.Â
After close to 9 months of running the network, the team decided maintaining a chain wasn't creating real value compared to building products people actually use.
Sophon L2 Shutdown confirmed on June 25, 2026
Chain stays live at least through the end of 2026 for migration
Deposits to the Sophon chain blocked starting June 25
Annual chain costs of $3 million to $3.4 million now freed up
The Sophon Base Migration shifts the entire project onto Base Network, and the first product coming out of that move is Pyre.Â
The Pyre app launches in early July as an onchain payments app built around a new category the team calls Onchain Entertainment.
Pyre lets people spend, save, send, and earn yield, all through one app. Every transaction turns into something interactive instead of just a basic payment, which is the core idea behind this Entertainment Finance angle.
The choice of Base chain was also strategic. Base brings the kind of consumer reach and active builder base that fits a payments app trying to grow fast outside the usual crypto crowd.
With the chain going away, the gas token and staking setup that defined SOPH's old utility goes away too. In its place comes a SOPH Token Buyback program funded directly by revenue from Pyre.Â
Pyre generates money through three channels:Â
interchange fees on card transactions,Â
performance fees on vault usage, andÂ
yield earned on reserves backing its stablecoin.Â
A portion of that revenue buys $SOPH from the open market on an ongoing basis.
Here's what makes this different from a typical token model:
Bought-back SOPH gets burned permanently, not handed back to holders
Supply contracts over time instead of expanding through emissions
A burn of over 46.5 million SOPH happens on June 28
That first burn comes from unused staking rewards and node buyback pools
$SOPH crypto token price currently trades at $0.0048, down 6.84% over 24 hours, with a market cap of $9.53M and a circulating supply of 2B SOPH out of a 10B total supply.Â

Source: CoinMarketCap OfficialÂ
This move says something bigger about where crypto might be heading. The platform openly admitted that owning infrastructure stopped paying off, and that real differentiation now lives in apps with actual product-market fit, not in running another general-purpose chain.
Guardian NFT holders keep earning their share of rewards without doing anything different right now. Reward streams keep vesting on Sophon for three more months until September 29, 2026 at 12AM GMT, after which rewards begin accruing on Ethereum mainnet instead.
The Base Ecosystem gains a known name with real funding and a working product roadmap. For Sophon, the Pyre onchain payments app becomes the test of whether the Apps Over Chains theory actually works, or whether this turns into a hard lesson about chasing product-market fit after raising big and building infrastructure first.Â
The Sophon price and SOPH token buyback activity over the coming months will likely tell that story clearly.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Crypto markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making any investment decisions.Â