There’s something about this Ethereum anniversary that really made me pause. Ten years. No downtime. Not a single missed block.
That’s not normal.
We’re talking about a blockchain that has been running non-stop, every single day, since July 30, 2015. It didn’t just survive the chaos of this space — it showed up, block after block, without ever blinking.
In the tech world, especially in crypto, that kind of track record is extremely rare. Things break all the time. Projects disappear. Entire chains have gone offline. But Ethereum? It just kept going, quietly, consistently, almost like a heartbeat.
And that matters.
Because this is the same chain that introduced us to smart contracts. The one that made DeFi possible. The one that turned NFTs into more than just internet pictures. It’s the base layer that people have been building on for years, not because it’s trendy, but because it actually works.
I still remember when Ethereum was treated like a crazy experiment. Some thought it was too ambitious, others thought it wouldn’t last. But it’s been a decade now.
Ten years of constant uptime in a space where even “blue chip” protocols have gone down.
Let that sink in.
And it’s not like Ethereum stayed the same all these years. It grew. It adapted. The switch from proof of work to proof of stake was one of the most complex transitions in blockchain history, and they pulled it off while the network was still live. That move alone cut energy consumption by more than 99%, something critics used to scream about for years.
Now, with Layer 2s like Arbitrum and Optimism taking off, Ethereum is scaling in a way that still keeps it secure and decentralized. It’s not about shortcuts. It’s about building carefully, and that’s something most people only appreciate after seeing other chains crash and burn from moving too fast.
From where I sit, especially coming from a country like Nigeria where access to reliable systems is never guaranteed, Ethereum’s consistency hits different. It’s not just about money or markets, it’s about having something that actually works. Every day. No drama.
That kind of reliability doesn’t get the spotlight often. It’s not flashy. But it matters. And it’s what gives this space any real chance of lasting.
Ethereum didn’t just survive the last 10 years, it helped shape the entire direction of Web3. And it did it without ever stopping once.
In crypto, that’s not just impressive. That’s legendary.