Base says it is overhauling its foundational software as it pushes for faster upgrades, tighter security control, and smoother scaling. In a new update, the Coinbase-backed Layer 2 said it is moving away from the OP Stack and transitioning toward a unified, Base-operated stack.
The shift that will change how node operators track releases and how quickly the network ships upgrades.
Instead of relying on a “patchwork” of dependencies, Base wants its core stack consolidated into a single repo and release pipeline.
Base is moving away from the OP Stack
The biggest line in the announcement is the direction of travel: Base is moving away from the OP Stack over the coming months.
That does not mean Base is cutting ties with Optimism entirely. It says it will continue working with Optimism during the transition as an OP Enterprise client while it evolves its own stack.
Practically, this marks a shift from Base primarily following Optimism’s release cadence to it taking more direct ownership of its software lifecycle.
What “unified stack” means in practice
Base says it is moving to a single unified stack operated by Base, with the code and releases centered on base/base.
The update is also clear about what changes for node operators:
- Node operators will need to follow base/base releases rather than Optimism’s releases.
- Releases will run on a faster, more frequent schedule once the transition is complete.
- Node operators should expect more guidance as Base gets closer to the cutover date.
In short, the repo to watch changes, and the pace of upgrades is expected to increase.
Why Base is doing this now
Base’s stated reason is speed and reliability at scale. The post frames the new architecture as a way to:
- Accelerate innovation by removing coordination friction across multiple upstream dependencies
- Improve scaling with a stack designed around Base’s own roadmap
- Strengthen security by tightening control over the code path that powers the chain
This also reflects a broader pattern in L2 infrastructure: as networks grow, the costs of depending on many moving parts can rise — and teams often push toward fewer external dependencies, clearer ownership, and faster iteration.
What to watch next
Base signals that the transition will happen “over the coming months,” and that it will share more specifics as the cutover date approaches.
For builders and node operators, the key near-term watch items are:
- When Base gives a firm timeline for the migration
- The operational steps required for node operators to move onto the Base client
- The first wave of upgrades that land under the new, faster release cycle
Final Summary
- Base is moving away from the OP Stack toward a unified, Base-operated stack centered on base/base, shifting where node operators track releases.
- The change signals tighter operational control as L2 competition intensifies, with Base aiming for faster upgrades while still working with Optimism during the transition.


