Trump's ballroom being completed before burned down houses in California is going to be a hell of a Vance/Rubio talking point in 2028. $BTC $TRUMP $BNB
🔥 UPDATE: Ethereum climbs to $3,215 on strong accumulation from shark wallets (1K-10K $ETH ) with network growth hitting 190K new wallets in one day, per Santiment.
- PeerDAS now unlocks 8x data throughput for rollups - UX improvements via the R1 curve & pre-confirmatons - Prep for scaling the L1 with gas limit increase & more $ETH
Georgia’s Ministry of Justice is integrating Hedera into its national digital infrastructure.
A sovereign nation is preparing to run core public services on $HBAR : - Land titles - Property ownership - Public registries - Digital government systems
They’re also exploring real-estate tokenization a TRILLION-dollar market.
@hedera isn’t competing with other L1s. It’s becoming government infrastructure. 🇬🇪
And most people still don’t realize how big this is for Ethereum.
Right now, Ethereum’s main bottleneck is L2 data congestion. Rollups like Base, Arbitrum, OP and zkSync all post their data back to Ethereum, but every node must download the full blob file to verify it. This slows the network, increases bandwidth usage, and keeps L2 fees higher than they should be.
Fusaka fixes this with three major changes.
1. Block capacity jumps from 45M → 150M gas. Ethereum instantly gets nearly 3× more room for transactions, contracts and rollup data. More space → more activity → more ETH burned.
2. PeerDAS reduces node workload. Nodes no longer download full blobs — they only check small random pieces. This cuts verification costs, reduces load on nodes, and allows Ethereum to handle way more data without slowing down.
3. Verkle Trees shrink Ethereum’s state. The network becomes easier to verify, nodes sync faster, and long-term storage becomes lighter. Running a node becomes more sustainable.
For everyday users, everything simply feels smoother: – Faster confirmations – More stable gas – Cheaper L2 transactions – Less congestion during busy periods
For L2s, the impact is even bigger. Rollups depend entirely on blob space. Fusaka increases that space while also lowering verification costs. This lets L2s scale faster, which leads to more transactions, more activity and ultimately more ETH burned, since all L2 activity settles on Ethereum.
More rollup usage → more settlement → more burn → stronger ETH economics.
When Pectra launched, ETH jumped around 50% in a week (market data at the time). Fusaka is deeper: more capacity, lower costs, better data handling, stronger burn mechanics.
Ethereum becomes faster, cheaper, lighter and far more scalable — and the market still hasn’t fully priced in what this means for ETH. $ETH