The future of on-chain markets will reward networks that optimize real execution, not theoretical benchmarks.
Alek Carter
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I used to believe speed alone was the game. If one chain could crank out blocks faster than the rest, traders would naturally pile in. But when I first dug into Fogo, it wasn’t the “40 ms” stat that stuck with me. It was the thinking and design choices behind that number what actually makes it possible that made me pause and look closer.
At forty milliseconds per block, you’re looking at roughly 25 blocks every second. Put that next to the ~400 ms pace on Solana or the much slower rhythm of Ethereum, and the confirmation window suddenly feels tiny.
For a trader trying to react to a sharp 2% move, that tighter window means way less time sitting exposed to slippage. On the surface, it sounds like nothing more than “it’s faster.” But under the hood, it points to a fundamentally different way of thinking about how consensus and execution should work.
There’s obviously a tradeoff when you start clustering validators more tightly. You can squeeze out better performance, but you’re also flirting with weaker decentralization. How well that balance holds up over time is still an open question.
But the bigger takeaway is this: on-chain networks aren’t just racing each other on raw throughput anymore. They’re competing on how good execution actually feels in practice. In this kind of market, execution isn’t some nice-to-have feature buried in the specs. It’s the first thing traders experience the texture of the system itself.
#fogo @Fogo Official $FOGO
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