(and why this is important for the market - without unnecessary illusions)
Ethereum has received one of the most important updates in recent years - Fusaka, which is not focused on beauty in documentation, but on what has long been a pain point for users: throughput, load on nodes, and transaction fees.
In a world where the competition for scalability has become a sport - Solana, Monad, Sui, Fuel - Ethereum is forced not just to 'catch up', but to update its foundation. Fusaka is exactly from this series.
🔧 What does Fusaka provide in practice?
1. Higher throughput
Not a cosmetic improvement, but a real reduction in the load on nodes.
→ more stable network operation
→ faster transaction confirmations
At peak load moments, this is what distinguishes a living network from a choking one.
2. Less load on infrastructure
Fusaka optimizes data execution and storage so that node maintenance does not require expensive SSDs and RAM, as has long been the 'new norm'.
This is critical for long-term decentralization — if only a data center can maintain a node, the ideology is blocked at the entrance.
3. Lower fees
And not through magic, but by reducing pressure on block space. This makes Ethereum competitive again in the 'mass transactions' category, which it has successfully ceded to its competitors.
🧭 How will this affect the market?
Ethereum gets a chance to regain lost segments.
DeFi has long been fleeing to cheaper L1s.
The NFT sector has flowed into Solana.
Some infrastructure projects are being built with the thought 'not on Ethereum' from the outset.
Fusaka is a market signal that Ethereum is not going to give up positions in the scaling war, and that the next stages — Danksharding and the full bloom of L2 — will become more realistic.
In the macro context — considering the volatility of the dollar, the Fed's policy, and global liquidity risks — Fusaka may become one of the factors that stabilize ETH capitalization in the medium-term.
This is not a 'momentary pump', but a fundamental upgrade that works against cyclical noise.
🎯 Conclusion
Ethereum continues to move towards high throughput and cheap transactions — but on its own terms, without compromising on decentralization.
🚨 Fusaka — a small but critical step in this direction.
And if we want to see a network that can handle the next billion Web3 users, we need updates like these.
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