Ethereum scalability solutions are making new progress. According to the latest roadmap developments, two core technologies have entered the implementation phase, which will have a profound impact on the entire network architecture.
Among them, ZK-EVM is gradually advancing from the Alpha stage and is expected to become the main method for block verification starting in 2027. What does this shift mean? Intuitively, gas fees are expected to decrease significantly, and transaction throughput will also increase accordingly. Another key technology, PeerDAS, has been tested on the mainnet. This scheme redistributes data availability tasks, allowing ordinary nodes to participate in network validation, breaking the previous dominance of large nodes.
From a technical architecture perspective, the combined logic of these two solutions addresses three major challenges: decentralization, network security, and transaction scalability. The combination of high bandwidth and zero-knowledge proofs enables Ethereum to avoid making compromises among these three aspects.
Future key points to watch include: the adjustment of gas limits in 2026 and the corresponding expansion of network capacity; the advancement of distributed block construction, which will further weaken the influence of MEV (Miner Extractable Value). If these improvements proceed as planned, between 2026 and 2030, Ethereum’s network performance and decentralization are expected to reach a new balance.
The current critical questions are: can these technological upgrades be implemented as scheduled? To what extent will gas fees actually decrease? These issues need to be observed in practical applications.
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Hash_Bandit
· 01-06 17:27
nah, 2027 for zk-evm mainstream? that's giving classic ethereum timeline energy... we've heard this before lol
heard the "gas fees gonna plummet" song too many times since like 2019. let's see if peerDAS actually gets validators running on potato hardware this time around
Reply0
MetaverseLandlady
· 01-04 08:58
Will it only take effect in 2027? How long do I have to wait? I can barely afford my gas fees right now.
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TokenomicsTrapper
· 01-04 08:44
lol 2027 for zk-evm? that's cute. actually if you read the contracts they're already pushing the timeline back. classic exit pump pattern before the real deadlines hit.
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YieldFarmRefugee
· 01-04 08:43
It will take until 2027 to see the real effects, the timeline is a bit long... But the combination of ZK-EVM+PeerDAS does have some potential.
Wait, can it really reduce Gas? Every time you say that, the results are still the same.
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GateUser-9f682d4c
· 01-04 08:30
It's not until 2027 that the real results will show. Anything said now is just on paper.
Ethereum scalability solutions are making new progress. According to the latest roadmap developments, two core technologies have entered the implementation phase, which will have a profound impact on the entire network architecture.
Among them, ZK-EVM is gradually advancing from the Alpha stage and is expected to become the main method for block verification starting in 2027. What does this shift mean? Intuitively, gas fees are expected to decrease significantly, and transaction throughput will also increase accordingly. Another key technology, PeerDAS, has been tested on the mainnet. This scheme redistributes data availability tasks, allowing ordinary nodes to participate in network validation, breaking the previous dominance of large nodes.
From a technical architecture perspective, the combined logic of these two solutions addresses three major challenges: decentralization, network security, and transaction scalability. The combination of high bandwidth and zero-knowledge proofs enables Ethereum to avoid making compromises among these three aspects.
Future key points to watch include: the adjustment of gas limits in 2026 and the corresponding expansion of network capacity; the advancement of distributed block construction, which will further weaken the influence of MEV (Miner Extractable Value). If these improvements proceed as planned, between 2026 and 2030, Ethereum’s network performance and decentralization are expected to reach a new balance.
The current critical questions are: can these technological upgrades be implemented as scheduled? To what extent will gas fees actually decrease? These issues need to be observed in practical applications.