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Ethereum Researchers Unveil ‘Native Rollups’ Prototype to Simplify Layer-2 Verification - Crypto Economy
TL;DR
Ethereum researchers have introduced an experimental prototype known as native rollups, a concept designed to simplify how Layer-2 networks interact with Ethereum. The model allows Ethereum to verify Layer-2 activity by directly executing rollup blocks on the base chain, reducing reliance on external proof systems that currently dominate the scaling ecosystem.
The early demonstration implements EIP-8079 through the Ethrex execution client and introduces a new mechanism called the EXECUTE precompile. Developers released code and documentation showing how a rollup environment could function while delegating verification responsibilities directly to Ethereum’s execution layer.
Native Rollups Verification Model On Ethereum
Most existing Layer-2 rollups use dedicated proof systems to validate transaction batches. Optimistic rollups rely on fraud proofs, while zero-knowledge rollups generate cryptographic validity proofs that Ethereum verifies without re-running the transactions themselves.
The native rollups approach modifies that structure. Instead of validating external proofs, Ethereum replays Layer-2 blocks using its own state transition function. By recomputing the rollup’s transactions directly on the base chain, Ethereum can confirm whether the resulting state updates are valid.
The prototype includes smart contracts that track rollup state and coordinate cross-layer communication. Deposits from Ethereum to the rollup environment can be processed normally, contracts can interact across layers, and withdrawal claims are validated through Merkle Patricia proofs that confirm the rollup state recorded on Ethereum.
Researchers involved in the experiment include developers working on the Ethrex execution client, alongside contributors associated with the Ethereum Foundation and analysts from L2BEAT. The shared documentation outlines the full operational life cycle of a rollup chain operating under the native rollup model.

Experiment Reflects Ongoing Ethereum Scaling Research
The current implementation remains strictly a proof-of-concept designed for experimentation rather than production infrastructure. Researchers emphasize that the prototype demonstrates a potential architectural direction for Ethereum’s scaling model.
The design could simplify long-term maintenance for Layer-2 networks. Because verification would rely on Ethereum’s execution environment, upgrades at the base layer could automatically extend to rollups using the native model, reducing the need for independent verification infrastructure maintained by each project.