OP Labs, the blockchain infrastructure firm behind the Optimism protocol, announced a 20% reduction in staff, impacting roughly 20 employees. CEO Jing Wang emphasized the decision was not financially driven, noting that the company remains well-capitalized with several years of runway.
Wang described the layoffs as a measure to “do fewer things well,” streamline decision-making, and reduce operational overhead.
While specific roles were not disclosed, Wang encouraged recruiters to connect with affected employees, highlighting their contributions to building the OP Stack and advancing the protocol.
OP Labs continues to serve as the primary research, development, and engineering team for Optimism, maintaining responsibility for ongoing upgrades to the Ethereum Layer 2 ecosystem.
Transitional Phase for Optimism
The restructuring coincides with a broader transitional period for Optimism. Last month, Base, the largest chain built on the OP Stack, announced it would migrate to its own technology stack, raising concerns about OP token valuation and protocol sustainability. Despite this, Optimism has outlined a 2026 roadmap focused on faster block times, native interoperability, regulatory-compliant tools, and zero-knowledge proof (ZK) systems aligned with Ethereum’s quantum-resistant roadmap.
The company is also leveraging governance mechanisms to support the protocol. In January, OP token holders approved a proposal allocating 50% of Superchain sequencer revenue to monthly token buybacks under a 12-month pilot, reinforcing the token’s alignment with protocol operations and revenue flow.
Market and Ecosystem Context
Optimism remains a key player in Ethereum Layer 2 scaling, with the OP Stack supporting multiple chains, including Base, before its departure.
The Superchain unifies these networks under shared infrastructure, while the ongoing development of ZK-proof systems positions Optimism for future scalability and compliance-focused applications. OP token currently trades at $0.12, reflecting a 37% decline over the past month, with a market capitalization of $251.7 million. Analysts view the staff reduction as a strategic adjustment to maintain innovation momentum and operational efficiency amid market and ecosystem shifts.