Base is an Ethereum Layer 2 network incubated by Coinbase, built on Optimism’s OP Stack and launched on mainnet in August 2023. The pitch: be the bridge between Coinbase’s traditional user base and decentralized finance. So far, it has worked. By May 2026, Base holds approximately $15 billion in total value locked, commands roughly 46.6% of all L2 DeFi TVL, and processes close to 15 million daily transactions. These are not speculative numbers. They come from on-chain data, and they put Base ahead of Arbitrum, zkSync, and every other rollup in active usage.
The network offers sub-cent, sub-second transactions with Ethereum-level security, tightly integrated with Coinbase’s 110+ million verified users. That integration has produced real results. As shown in the Dune dashboard screenshots above, Base has recorded 6.36 billion cumulative transactions and 281 million total wallets as of early May 2026. The transaction count chart tells the story clearly: near-zero activity in mid-2023, steady growth through 2024, then a sharp climb to 15+ million daily transactions by late 2025. This is not a ghost chain inflated by bot farms.
For most of Base’s life, the honest answer was: we don’t. Coinbase was emphatic. Jesse Pollak, Base’s creator, wrote on X in November 2024: “and finally: there are no plans for a @base network token. we are focused on building.” That was less than 18 months ago.
Then BaseCamp 2025 happened. In September 2025, at the event in Stowe, Vermont, Pollak reversed course and publicly stated that Base was “beginning to explore a network token.” He described it as a potential tool for accelerating decentralization and expanding creator and developer growth. Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong followed up on X confirming the exploration, while stressing no definitive plans exist yet. The shift from “never” to “we’re exploring” is significant.
A few signals make the expectation stronger. First, every major Optimism Superchain peer has now launched or is launching a token. Optimism has OP. Linea distributed 9.3 billion LINEA tokens in September 2025. Kraken’s Ink L2 is moving in the same direction. Base is the largest holdout. Second, Polymarket prediction markets have assigned a 69% probability to a Base token launch before December 31, 2026, making it one of the most watched potential events in crypto this year. Third, DWF Labs published research in February 2026 suggesting a token could redirect 85% of Base’s sequencer revenue to token holders or stakers. Base generated $78.2 million in sequencer fees in 2025 alone. That fee-accrual mechanic would give the token real fundamentals, not just governance optics. None of this is confirmation. But the signal is unusually clear for a project that was saying “no token” just 18 months ago.
There is no snapshot date. There are no confirmed eligibility criteria. What we have is precedent from Arbitrum, Optimism, and Linea, combined with Base’s own onchainscore.xyz tool. Brian Armstrong has shared the tool publicly on X, and the community broadly treats it as the de facto eligibility benchmark.
We tested a mid-tier farming approach over several weeks. Here is what we recommend:
Create a fresh wallet in MetaMask, Rabby, or Zerion. Do not use your main holdings wallet. Download the Base App (the rebranded Coinbase Wallet from December 2025). Complete Base Verify using a Coinbase account or a Twitter/X account with 100+ followers and at least one year of history. Verification is free. Time: 20-30 minutes. Sybil tip: One well-verified, older wallet beats five fresh ones. Wallets with existing Ethereum mainnet history score significantly higher on onchainscore.
Use the official Base bridge at bridge.base.org or a third-party like Rhino Finance. Bridge at minimum $100-200 worth of ETH to make subsequent activity economically meaningful. Gas cost: $2-5 on the Ethereum side. Time: 5-10 minutes. Sybil tip: Do not bridge the exact same amount from multiple wallets. Vary amounts and timing.
Aerodrome is the dominant native DEX on Base and has been flagged by community researchers as a likely eligibility signal. Connect your wallet at aerodrome.finance, swap ETH for USDC or another token, then swap back. Do this several times over multiple weeks. Daily is ideal, but even 2-3 times per week builds meaningful volume. Gas cost: under $0.10 per swap on Base. Time: 5 minutes per session. Sybil tip: Consistency over time matters far more than burst activity. An account with 60 days of weekly swaps looks far more organic than 60 swaps done in a single day.
Liquidity provision likely carries more weight than simple swaps in Base’s scoring model, based on Optimism and Arbitrum precedent. On Aerodrome or Uniswap v3 on Base, deposit a small LP position. $50-100 is enough. Leave it for at least 30 days. Gas cost: $0.05-0.20 for deposit and withdrawal. Time: 10 minutes to set up, then passive. Sybil tip: Do not withdraw and re-deposit quickly. That pattern is routinely flagged by sybil filters.
Morpho on Base grew from $48 million to over $2 billion TVL in 2025, driven partly by direct Coinbase app integration. Deposit a small amount of USDC or ETH as collateral. You do not need to borrow. The deposit activity itself builds your protocol footprint. Gas cost: under $0.10. Time: 5 minutes. Sybil tip: Spread activity across multiple protocols. Single-protocol wallets are often filtered out in L2 airdrop distributions.
Zora on Base is the straightforward choice. It has been a native Base application since launch, and NFT minting has appeared in both Optimism and Arbitrum eligibility criteria. Mint a free or low-cost item. Gas cost: $0.01-0.05. Time: 5 minutes.
Visit onchainscore.xyz and connect your farming wallet. The tool evaluates transaction count, protocol diversity, bridging activity, and L1 Ethereum history. We recommend targeting a score of 50+ before any potential snapshot. The exact algorithm is not public, but community analysis consistently points to protocol diversity as the key variable, not raw transaction volume.
The Base App integrates social features through Farcaster. Base Verify links your social identity to your wallet. Staying active in the Base ecosystem, even just posting and engaging on Farcaster, may factor into eligibility criteria beyond pure on-chain data.
Estimated Total Budget: $150-300 over 3-6 months for a meaningful position.
Sybil resistance: High. Base has the most sophisticated sybil-detection setup of any L2 we have tracked. Onchainscore.xyz is live and public. Base Verify ties wallets to real identities. Running multiple wallets is costly and likely counterproductive.
Airdrop confirmation: None. This is the biggest risk. “Exploring a token” is not a launch announcement. Coinbase’s regulatory exposure as a public US company is real, and execution complexity is high. The 2026 timeline is community speculation, not team guidance.
Smart contract risk: Low to moderate. Base itself is Ethereum-settled and reached Stage 1 decentralization with fault proofs in May 2025. The DeFi protocols involved, Aerodrome and Morpho, carry their own contract risk, but both are audited and have operated at significant scale for over a year.
Overall verdict: The network fundamentals are solid, the directional signals are clearer than most speculative airdrop plays, and the farming activity here is useful regardless of whether a drop materializes. You are interacting with functional DeFi infrastructure, not farming points on a protocol that has no product. That said, anyone sizing a position based on JPMorgan’s $12-34 billion market cap estimates should treat those as analyst speculation, not a floor.
If you’re farming Base, these three are worth running in parallel:
Nothing in this article constitutes financial advice. Airdrop eligibility criteria have not been confirmed by Coinbase or the Base team. All on-chain data sourced from Dune Analytics (nvthao/base-network-analytics-dashboard) and DefiLlama unless otherwise noted.


