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Ethereum’s Game-Changing Upgrade Set to Make It the World’s Fastest Blockchain Ecosystem

Ethereum’s Game-Changing Upgrade Set to Make It the World’s Fastest Blockchain Ecosystem

Published:
2025-10-16 11:00:05
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Ethereum's latest network overhaul just dropped—and it's rewriting the rules of blockchain speed.

The Need for Speed

While traditional finance still debates blockchain's merits, Ethereum's new upgrade bypasses legacy limitations that have plagued the network for years. Transaction times are getting slashed, gas fees are getting crushed, and scalability concerns are getting addressed head-on.

Network Evolution

This isn't just another incremental improvement—it's the architectural leap that cuts through previous bottlenecks. The upgrade delivers performance metrics that leave competing chains playing catch-up, proving that first-mover advantage still matters when you actually innovate.

Of course, Wall Street analysts will probably still call it 'experimental' while their own settlement systems take three business days to move money across the street.

Bottom line: Ethereum isn't just maintaining its dominance—it's accelerating into the future while others are still figuring out how to start their engines.

Fusaka upgrade

The first significant milestone on that path is Fusaka, Ethereum’s upcoming hard fork, tentatively expected in December.

The planned upgrade blends improvements to Ethereum’s execution and consensus layers in one coordinated release.

Unlike Dencun, which introduced “blobs” to help rollups scale, Fusaka isn’t chasing raw throughput.

Instead, its role is subtler, focusing on making the network lighter, cheaper, and more efficient.

Fusaka implements 12 ethereum Improvement Proposals (EIPs) aimed at streamlining validator workloads and improving how rollups post their data.

The centerpiece, EIP-7594, or PeerDAS, lets validators confirm data availability by sampling portions of rollup data instead of downloading it fully.

While this doesn’t directly raise TPS, it changes how efficiently Ethereum handles data. More rollup information can now fit per block without increasing node requirements.

Developers expect the upgrade to lower rollup transaction costs and make it easier for small operators to run validators.

Notably, it also raises the gas limit from 45 million to 60 million, a 33% bump that gives Layer-2s more headroom to publish compressed transaction data.

Ethereum Gas Limits

Ethereum Gas Limits (Source: GrowThePie)

Meanwhile, the rollout is already underway. Fusaka passed early tests on Holesky and Sepolia, and will undergo its final trial on the Hoodi testnet later this month.

Real-time proving

While Fusaka lays the groundwork, the real spectacle is happening in the proving arena.

On Oct. 15, Ethereum scaling firm Brevis unveiled Pico Prism, a new zero-knowledge Ethereum VIRTUAL Machine (zkEVM) capable of producing cryptographic proofs almost as fast as the network creates blocks.

In testing, the system achieved 99.9% real-time proving, generating full block proofs in under 12 seconds.

Ethereum Foundation researcher Justin Drake pointed out that this represents a leap from May’s performance, when the SP1 Hypercube setup could only prove 94% of blocks within the same window.

According to him, the improvement cuts average proof latency to 6.9 seconds, meaning block verification can keep pace with block production. Notably, this is a prerequisite for Ethereum’s long-term goal of sub-second settlement.

Drake furthered that this development, alongside the imminent Fusaka upgrade, will make on-premise proving viable for the first time.

He said:

“By year’s end several teams will prove every L1 EVM block on a 16-GPU cluster, drawing less than 10kW total. The 10kW target—about the same as a Tesla home charger—matters for on-prem proving in garages and offices, eliminating reliance on cloud proving.”

Scalability roadmap

Drake believes these developments fit into his long-term projection of “gigagas L1, teragas L2.”

In this scenario, Ethereum’s throughput on its base layer for high-value activities like payments and trading rises to 10,000 transactions per second (TPS).

On the other hand, the network can scale up to 10 million TPS across its layer-2 networks to handle everything else. Drake said:

“L1 throughput has grown 100x since genesis ten years ago, from 20 kilogas/sec to 2 megagas/sec. With zkEVMs we can 100x again, in half the time.”

Rising technical debt

Ethereum’s march toward faster, cheaper transactions comes with a quieter problem of its technical debt piling up.

Ethereum developer Federico Carrone, better known as Fede’s Intern, cautions that many of the network’s Core development tools, especially the Solidity programming language, are losing momentum.

Solidity is the foundation of Ethereum’s DeFi ecosystem. According to DeFiLlama, it is responsible for more than 86% of the smart contract language used in the blockchain network’s over $200 billion DeFi protocols.

Ethereum's Smart Contract Languages

Ethereum’s Smart Contract Languages TVL (Source: DeFiLlama)

His concerns echo those of Paradigm CTO Georgios Konstantopoulos, who had previously said Solidity’s ecosystem was “in a problematic state.”

However, Carrone sees the issue as technical and economic for the blockchain network.

He argued that maintaining complex infrastructure depends on time, continuity, and deep expertise, which cannot be obtained overnight.

In addition, Carrone noted that Ethereum’s planned gas-limit increase under the Fusaka upgrade poses another risk.

Carrone warned that many execution clients have not significantly improved their performance and may struggle to process larger blocks.

Considering all these issues, he concluded:

“Ethereum’s technical debt keeps growing, not only because of constant and necessary protocol evolution, but because a large set of dependencies and repositories are stagnating. The ecosystem continues to scale, securing billions of dollars in assets, while parts of the foundation are eroding.”

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