As it grows, the rules are established by itself, and the chain is managed independently,

Polymarket has had enough of external dependency issues causing outages, and has turned to building its own L2 to ensure stability and scalability, marking the platform's migration from reliance on Polygon to an independent ecosystem.

It feels like this is a necessary path for the platform's growth. Only when it stabilizes can it have fun, what do you think?

Like Hyperliquid, once the scale increases, controlling execution, costs, and user experience (UX) becomes super important; this is a good decision.

You can't always squeeze into a shared dormitory (Polygon), you have to build your own villa (L2), only by controlling everything can you feel comfortable.

@Polymarket