Jesse Pollak admits his social-first strategy was 'definitively wrong' and hands the consumer app to Jordan Fish as Base pivots to trading, payments, and AI.
Jesse Pollak, the creator of Coinbase’s Ethereum Layer 2 network Base, is stepping back from leading the consumer Base app. The new person in charge: Jordan Fish, better known in crypto circles as Cobie.
The announcement, made on July 15, represents more than a personnel shuffle. It’s an admission that the strategy Pollak spent years championing, one built around onchain social applications and creator coins, simply did not work.
A ‘punch in the face’ and a pivot #
Pollak didn’t sugarcoat it. He described the first quarter of 2026 as a “punch in the face,” conceding he was “definitively wrong” about social products driving the next wave of crypto adoption.
The thesis was clean enough on paper: platforms like Farcaster and Zora, along with creator coins, would bring millions of new users onchain through social experiences. In practice, those products fell drastically short of expectations.
While Pollak was betting on social, Base was losing ground in the areas that actually mattered to users. Trading, tokenization, and payment functionalities all lagged behind competitors building on rival Layer 2 networks.
Enter Cobie #
Cobie is one of crypto’s more recognizable personalities, known for his podcast UpOnly and a reputation for sharp, no-nonsense market commentary.
Pollak acquired Echo, a platform tied to Cobie, for $375 million in 2025. There was also a $25 million deal connected to the UpOnly podcast revival.
Cobie’s mandate is to elevate the Base app, and his ambitions reportedly extend beyond Base itself. The goal is to push app functionalities into broader onchain territory, not just serve as a frontend for a single Layer 2 network.
New priorities for 2026 #
With Pollak stepping back from the app to focus on Base’s blockchain infrastructure, the strategic roadmap for 2026 looks dramatically different from what came before.
Three priorities now sit at the top of the list: improving trading capabilities, implementing stablecoin solutions for global payments, and developing AI-driven tools within the platform.
Pollak’s shift also carries a philosophical dimension. By separating consumer app development from the underlying blockchain, he’s trying to preserve Base’s neutrality as infrastructure.
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