Across Protocol launched in 2022 as an optimistic bridge designed specifically for speed and cost efficiency. While most bridges required users to wait minutes or hours for cross-chain transfers, Across settled most transfers in under two minutes by using a network of “relayers” who fronted capital on the destination chain and were later repaid from the source chain. The design prioritized UX: fast, cheap, and simple.
Across’s architecture used UMA’s optimistic oracle for verification — a system where transactions are assumed valid unless challenged within a dispute window. This meant most transfers settled instantly (the relayer took the risk) while still having a security backstop (invalid transfers could be disputed and reversed). The trade-off was that relayers needed significant capital and took on risk, which they were compensated for through fees.
By 2024, Across had become one of the most-used bridges for Ethereum L2 transfers, processing billions in cumulative volume. Its integration into bridge aggregators like Li.Fi and Socket made it the default route for many cross-L2 transfers. The ACX token was distributed to early users and relayers. Across’s focus on the L2-to-L2 corridor — rather than trying to bridge between fundamentally different chains — let it optimize for the highest-demand use case in the Ethereum ecosystem.
Across represents a specific philosophy about bridges: rather than trying to build a universal cross-chain protocol, focus on doing one thing extremely well. The L2-to-L2 transfer market is enormous and growing, and Across’s speed advantage in that specific corridor earned it a durable market position. Sometimes the best product strategy isn’t to be the most general — it’s to be the fastest at the thing most people actually need.
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