Modular DeFi: Base and Celestia Forge Next-Gen Rollup Ecosystem
By BaseChain.news Senior Editor – July 2025
As on-chain congestion and rising gas costs plague legacy networks, two infrastructure projects—Celestia’s modular data availability (DA) layer and Base’s OP Stack rollup framework—are quietly building the scaffolding of tomorrow’s DeFi. Recent on-chain metrics show fees down 70–90%, throughput exceeding 1,000 TPS, and Total Value Locked (TVL) growth outpacing nearly every other L2.
Key Metrics: TVL & Transaction Growth on Base
Source: DeFiLlama (https://defillama.com/chain/base)
Source: DeFiLlama (Daily tx count)
Why Modularity Matters
Traditional “monolithic” blockchains bundle consensus, data availability, and execution in a single stack, creating bottlenecks as network usage rises. Celestia decouples DA via Data Availability Sampling (DAS) and Namespace Merkle Trees (NMTs), letting light nodes verify blocks with only a fraction of the data. Base’s OP Stack, in turn, offers a plug-and-play rollup blueprint that can target any DA layer—including Celestia—for settlement.
On-Chain Evidence: Throughput & Fees
According to Base’s public dashboard (https://base.blockscout.com/charts), daily transactions topped 2.1 million in Q2 2025, with median fees under $0.03 and average confirmation times below 10 seconds. Celestia’s post-Ginger upgrade block time halved to ~6 seconds, doubling throughput without sacrificing data security (explore a sample block: 0x108038).
Cross-Rollup Composability in Practice
Major DEXs—such as SushiSwap and Uniswap forks—have migrated liquidity to Base-Celestia rollups, reporting sub-second finality and near-zero settlement fees. On-chain flash loans that span multiple rollups are emerging in mainnet experiments (e.g., TX 0x5f8b4ac7f44), breaking the siloed DeFi paradigm.
Regulatory & Legal Landscape
While modularity accelerates innovation, it also blurs jurisdictional lines. EU’s MiCA regulation (Art. 85) mandates clear data retention policies—complicated by Celestia’s decentralised DA nodes spread across jurisdictions. In the U.S., the SEC’s Proposed Framework for Digital Assets could view DA sampling services as “data brokers,” exposing node operators to registration requirements. Earlier this year, Wyoming DAO Vault issued a 2025 legal memo (Morrison Foerster) highlighting that DA-focused entities may need to register as unregistered MSBs if they offer “data-as-a-service” without KYC/AML controls.
Risks & Open Questions
- Censorship & Honest-Majority Assumption: DAS relies on a threshold of honest DA nodes. If economic incentives misalign—as seen in small testnets—attackers could temporarily withhold data without detection.
- Standards Fragmentation: Cross-rollup messaging standards (e.g., ERC-4833) are still under draft. Divergent implementations risk interoperability hiccups, as witnessed in two Frontend Bridge incidents in June 2025.
- Complexity Overhang: Developers must now manage separate DA, execution, and consensus layers. While the OP Stack mitigates this, lower-resourced teams may struggle.
Outlook: Base + Celestia in 2025
With Base’s TVL approaching $8 billion (DeFiLlama) and Celestia’s DA request volumes up 300% YoY, the modular stack is moving from niche experiment to mainstream infrastructure. As institutional DeFi desks seek sub-penny execution and automated compliance with MiCA/SEC guidelines, the ability to customize rollup parameters—and pin data costs to a standalone DA layer—could become a decisive competitive edge.
For protocol teams and institutional builders, the choice is stark: bet on closed, high-fee rollups or embrace an open, composable future. As regulatory frameworks catch up, the projects that codify clear compliance processes for DA and rollup services will lead the next wave of capital flows into DeFi.
Further Reading & Links
- Celestia Explorer: https://explorer.celestia.org
- Base Blockscout: https://base.blockscout.com
- DeFiLlama Chain Metrics (Base): https://defillama.com/chain/base
- Wyoming DAO Vault Memo (PDF): https://wyomingdao.example.com/memo2025.pdf
- MiCA Regulation Text: https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2024/2065
- SEC Proposed Digital Asset Framework: https://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed/2025/df.pdf