Ethereum Layer-2 Base Stalls Nearly Two Hours After Invalid Block Freezes Sequencer

ETH

ETH/USDT

$1,559.29
-3.68%
24h Volume

$15,244,403,010.68

24h H/L

$1,660.54 / $1,532.90

Change: $127.64 (8.33%)

Long/Short
79.2%
Long: 79.2%Short: 20.8%
Funding Rate

-0.0029%

Shorts pay

Data provided by COINOTAG DATALive data
Ethereum
Ethereum
Daily

$1,564.76

-0.20%

Volume (24h): -

Resistance Levels
Resistance 3$1,710.32
Resistance 2$1,658.47
Resistance 1$1,583.57
Price$1,564.76
Support 1$1,532.90
Support 2$1,483.16
Support 3$1,244.77
Pivot (PP):$1,565.28
Trend:Downtrend
RSI (14):30.4
(02:07 AM UTC)
4 min read
1044 views
0 comments
AI SummaryAI
  • Base halted block production for nearly two hours on Thursday after invalid block #47,806,542 triggered a consensus failure, with all funds confirmed safe.
  • Block sequencing was restored at 17:51 UTC and normal production confirmed at 17:58 UTC, putting the full stall at roughly 115 minutes.
  • The Beryl hard fork opened its activation window at 18:00 UTC, introducing the B20 native token standard and requiring node operators to run base/node v1.1.1.
  • COINOTAG aggregate data shows an Extreme Fear reading of 13, Bitcoin dominance at 70.2%, and total crypto market cap near $1.70 trillion.

This summary was AI-generated, AI-reviewed and published under COINOTAG editorial oversight.

Crypto News

Ethereum's largest layer-2 network, Base, halted block production for nearly two hours on Thursday after an invalid block triggered a consensus failure, marking what appears to be its most severe disruption in 90 days. The Coinbase-incubated network first flagged abnormal block production at 16:03 UTC, and within minutes its engineering team publicly acknowledged the fault. Base confirmed in an official statement that all user funds remained safe throughout the stall. As an altcoin ecosystem anchored to Ethereum, Base settles a large share of low-cost transactions, so the freeze rippled across deposits, withdrawals and on-chain activity until sequencing resumed.

The recovery followed a tightly documented sequence. By 16:52 UTC — roughly 50 minutes after the first alert — engineers identified the root cause. The consensus problem was isolated at 17:21 UTC, when internal sequencer and node components showed early signs of recovery. Block sequencing was restored at 17:51 UTC, and the network confirmed normal block production at 17:58 UTC before entering a monitoring phase. Our reading of the published timeline puts the full stall at roughly 115 minutes. Base stated that any remaining stuck nodes would recover after a restart and resync, and pledged a detailed post-mortem once its internal review concludes.

At the technical core, the incident was an unsafe head stall in OP Stack terminology, traced to block #47,806,542. The sequencer — the component that orders and produces new blocks — generated an invalid block that blocked construction of every subsequent block. The unsafe head refers to the most recent blocks a sequencer produces before they are published to Ethereum layer-1 for final settlement. Crucially, because the faulty block was never committed to Ethereum, the event caused no permanent loss and no significant chain reorganization. Rollup infrastructure projects such as AltLayer face comparable sequencer risks, and similar stalls have hit other layer-2 networks.

For users, the practical effect was delay rather than loss. During the roughly two-hour window, deposits, withdrawals and trades across the Base ecosystem queued or failed to confirm. Node operators running Base infrastructure were instructed to restart their nodes to fully restore synchronization, while most ordinary users and existing smart contracts required no action. Decentralized applications built on the network — including Base-native venues like Aerodrome Finance — depend entirely on the sequencer to settle activity, so the freeze temporarily suspended trading and liquidity operations until block production normalized and pending transactions cleared.

The outage struck just hours before a scheduled protocol upgrade, though Base confirmed the two were unrelated. The Beryl hard fork opened its activation window at 18:00 UTC the same day, introducing B20 — a native token standard built directly into the node software rather than deployed as a smart contract. The standard is designed to make issuance more efficient for stablecoin and real-world-asset projects, complementing existing models such as algorithmic stablecoins. Beryl also shortens withdrawal delays and ships Reth V2 improvements. Node operators must run base/node v1.1.1 or later, while most users and deployed contracts need take no action.

The stall was not an isolated anomaly. Base previously endured withdrawal problems lasting roughly 30 hours in May, alongside a separate disruption in August 2025, and at one point its status-tracking system was itself down without immediate detection. Token-infrastructure standards across Ethereum, from 0x Protocol to newer issuance frameworks, increasingly rely on these layer-2 rails operating without interruption. The recurrence underscores a structural tension for high-throughput rollups: concentrating block ordering in a single sequencer delivers speed and low fees, but introduces a single point of failure that can stall an entire ecosystem when one invalid block enters the chain.

Taken together, these developments expose the operational fragility beneath crypto's scaling narrative just as sentiment turns defensive. Our aggregate market data reads an Extreme Fear print of 13 on the Fear and Greed Index, with Bitcoin dominance elevated at 70.2% and total crypto market capitalization near $1.70 trillion — a backdrop in which capital crowds into Bitcoin and away from higher-risk layer-2 assets. The Base incident, confirmed via the network's own status disclosures and on-chain block data, will test confidence in Ethereum's rollup-centric roadmap. With a full post-mortem still pending, the key unresolved question is whether the invalid-block root cause is a one-off or a systemic sequencer weakness.

COINOTAG does not provide financial advisory services. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered investment advice. Cryptocurrency investments involve high risk.

Add COINOTAG as a Preferred Source

Add COINOTAG to your preferred sources in Google News and Search to see our coverage first.

Add on Google
James Mitchell

James Mitchell

COINOTAG author

View all posts
AI-AssistedSenior Technical Analyst·James Mitchell is a senior technical analyst with over six years of dedicated cryptocurrency market analysis experience.

AI-generated, AI-reviewed, under COINOTAG editorial oversight.

Comments

Comments