The Ethereum Fusaka upgrade has now been successfully deployed. The core of this update focuses on fine-tuning the Blob parameters—raising the target number of Blobs per block to 14, with a maximum capacity of 21. It may sound a bit technical, but the significance behind it is actually very important.
Traditional upgrade methods often involve bundling a large number of changes—either all or nothing—and waiting one or two years for the next opportunity. This time, the approach is completely different—adopting a flexible "gradual expansion" strategy. In other words, the network capacity can be independently adjusted based on actual conditions, eliminating the need to wait anxiously for the big annual upgrade.
For node operators, the verification burden has been significantly reduced. And for the Layer 2 ecosystem, it’s even more beneficial—optimizing data availability means L2 solutions can handle more transactions while maintaining sufficient security. This incremental improvement approach demonstrates Ethereum’s ongoing iteration in infrastructure development.
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MevSandwich
· 01-11 02:13
Gradual expansion is really more reliable than a major annual update. Only then can L2 truly breathe a sigh of relief.
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ser_we_are_early
· 01-10 06:15
To be honest, the Blob expansion has some substance. The L2 ecosystem is about to take off, right?
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NftRegretMachine
· 01-09 18:20
Adjusting parameters again? Alright, L2 users should be happy. Just don't know if the Gas fees will really decrease, or if it's just on paper.
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SchroedingersFrontrun
· 01-08 23:20
Gradually expanding capacity is a move I like. Compared to the frustration of waiting a year for an upgrade, flexible fine-tuning feels much better.
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Blob capacity doubling, L2s can finally breathe a sigh of relief. Transaction fees are expected to decrease.
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Wait, if the node validation burden decreases, wouldn't centralization become more serious...
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Alright, another "gradual improvement." The actual effectiveness needs to be proven with data.
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Ethereum's recent moves are truly clever, applying what they've learned flexibly.
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DeFiAlchemist
· 01-08 03:00
the blob transmutation is finally happening... watched that yield potential on l2s expand in real-time ngl. this incremental philosophy hits different—no more waiting for the great protocol upheaval every 18 months
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DegenWhisperer
· 01-08 02:59
Gradually expanding capacity is still pretty cool; it's much better than waiting a year for a year. The L2 ecosystem can finally breathe a sigh of relief.
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MetadataExplorer
· 01-08 02:58
It's rolled up now. This move by Ethereum is indeed a bit different. No need to wait for a major version; this is true flexibility.
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DeFiDoctor
· 01-08 02:58
Hmm... Blob dropped from 16 to 14 and then rose to 21. This round of parameter fine-tuning looks quite flexible, but it needs to be monitored with actual L2 throughput data to see how it performs. Just changing parameters without considering liquidity indicators might mean that clinical performance still needs further observation.
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AirdropDreamer
· 01-08 02:49
Haha, finally no more dragging on for a year or two. This gradual expansion approach is truly brilliant.
Friends in L2, this time you're about to take off. Data availability optimization will give you a direct boost.
Here we go again, every time it's about optimization, but how much TPS actually improves remains a question...
Adjusting Blob parameters, in simple terms, means being able to handle more transactions. The Gas fees in wallets should come down.
This step-by-step expansion strategy is really smart, much more reliable than a one-time upgrade that could go wrong.
Sounds good, but how long will we have to wait this time before truly feeling the speed increase?
Node operators can breathe a sigh of relief, but us regular users are still at the mercy of Gas fees.
This is what infrastructure should look like—taking it step by step, no need for those radical changes.
Is the limit of 21 Blobs per block still a bit conservative? Can it be pushed even further?
L2s, you're in luck this time. Finally, you can breathe a little easier and not be so competitive.
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DefiVeteran
· 01-08 02:32
Gradually scaling up is a strategy I like. No more waiting half a year like before... L2 is comfortable now, with increased throughput, safety remains intact. This is the work that should be done.
The Ethereum Fusaka upgrade has now been successfully deployed. The core of this update focuses on fine-tuning the Blob parameters—raising the target number of Blobs per block to 14, with a maximum capacity of 21. It may sound a bit technical, but the significance behind it is actually very important.
Traditional upgrade methods often involve bundling a large number of changes—either all or nothing—and waiting one or two years for the next opportunity. This time, the approach is completely different—adopting a flexible "gradual expansion" strategy. In other words, the network capacity can be independently adjusted based on actual conditions, eliminating the need to wait anxiously for the big annual upgrade.
For node operators, the verification burden has been significantly reduced. And for the Layer 2 ecosystem, it’s even more beneficial—optimizing data availability means L2 solutions can handle more transactions while maintaining sufficient security. This incremental improvement approach demonstrates Ethereum’s ongoing iteration in infrastructure development.