Four high-profile public chains based on the Solana Virtual Machine (SVM) saw their on-chain value collapse by over 97 percent in a severe capital outflow event.
Data from on-chain analytics platform DeFiLlama confirms the near-total drain of assets from Solayer, Eclipse, Fogo, and Soon Network, once hyped as the "Four Heavenly Kings" of high-performance blockchains.
According to DeFiLlama, Solayer's Total Value Locked (TVL) fell 97.13 percent to $14.96 million. Eclipse's TVL dropped 97.18 percent to just $1.38 million, Fogo's stands at $1.09 million, and Soon Network's TVL is now effectively zero.
The rapid collapse serves as a cautionary tale for investors chasing yield in new Layer 1 ecosystems, suggesting the initial TVL may have been unsustainable. The event is likely to trigger increased scrutiny of how new protocols attract and retain capital, potentially impacting sentiment for other SVM-based projects like Sei and Neon.
The dramatic capital flight from these four chains underscores the fragility of liquidity in emerging blockchain ecosystems. While the SVM architecture, borrowed from Solana, promises high throughput and low transaction fees, this incident proves that technology alone is insufficient to retain value without a robust and engaged user base. The "Four Heavenly Kings" had attracted significant attention but failed to build lasting applications or use cases to lock in capital beyond initial speculative interest.
This sharp reversal could make it more difficult for new Layer 1 and Layer 2 networks to gain traction, as investors may now favor more established platforms like Ethereum and Solana itself, which have demonstrated greater resilience.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.



