On the #Ethereum side, a quiet but game-changing period is beginning. Shall we look at it from a more basic and simple perspective?


Fusaka may not seem to have generated the excitement of previous upgrades, but it’s actually not a small update.


The biggest overlooked detail: two hard forks per year.


Do you know what this means?


Ethereum is no longer a slow, lumbering giant. It’s shifting to a faster, more aggressive, more proactive development schedule. After the Merge they were doing one update per year, now the pace is doubling.


With PeerDAS at the core of Fusaka, Validators no longer need to download all blob data they can sample smaller pieces while maintaining the same security.


The result?


More data space for L2s

Lower costs

Less bandwidth

Cheaper transactions


These are the developments the rollup ecosystem has been waiting for.


And it doesn’t end here. With the BPO update in January, blob capacity can increase up to 8×.


This basically means L2s going full turbo mode. On the developer side, the vibe is “gentlemen, the gates are open.” :D


There are other improvements in the background too gas limit ceiling, secp256r1 support, opcodes that speed up ZK… Ethereum is also laying down its hidden armor against future quantum risks, which we've been talking about for months.


Maybe these don’t create an immediate “wow” for end users, but in terms of infrastructure, there’s a massive accumulation of power. The door to Ethereum’s true scaling era is slowly opening.


And the best part?


The next major update, Glamsterdam, is already being planned. Expected in 2026.


If you’re asking what all of these mean in simple terms: Ethereum is no longer a bulky structure updated once a year. It has increased its pace and is fully opening the path for the L2 ecosystem. Fusaka is perhaps the first sign that Ethereum has entered its “sprint phase.”


Of course, none of this is investment advice. These are technical details. And also not an ad.