The Ethereum Fusaka Upgrade — set to go live on December 3, 2025 — represents one of the most significant network upgrades in Ethereum’s history, aimed squarely at solving long-standing scalability and cost issues for Layer-2 (L2) rollups. At its core is a feature called PeerDAS (Peer Data Availability Sampling), which transforms how data from L2 rollups is handled: instead of forcing every node to download every “blob” of data, nodes can now sample small pieces to confirm data integrity. This dramatically reduces bandwidth and storage demands while preserving security — and opens the door to a far larger throughput capacity.
Fusaka also raises Ethereum’s block gas limit (from around 45 million to 60 million), enabling more transactions and smart-contract executions per block, which helps ease congestion on the base layer (Layer-1).Combined with increased “blob capacity” per block and progressive “Blob-Parameter-Only” (BPO) forks planned after the main upgrade, the network becomes capable of accommodating a significantly heightened volume of Layer-2 activity.
For Layer-2 networks (like Arbitrum, Optimism, Base and others), the implications are profound. Fusaka promises to lower transaction costs by 40–60%, increase data-posting capacity per block by up to 3.5× or more depending on demand, and enable throughput potentially reaching hundreds of thousands of transactions per second across the L2 ecosystem.
For developers, validators, and node-operators, Fusaka lowers the barrier to entry significantly — PeerDAS reduces validator bandwidth and storage requirements by roughly 70–80%, making it more feasible to run full nodes from modest hardware or home setups, thereby strengthening network decentralization.
Economically, the upgrade also realigns how value flows through Ethereum’s ecosystem: with cheaper L2 transactions and higher throughput, Ethereum reaffirms its role as the foundational settlement and data-availability layer for decentralized applications (dApps), DeFi platforms, and rollup-based infrastructure.
In short — the Fusaka Upgrade could mark a turning point for Ethereum: making Layer-2 dApps faster, more affordable, and more scalable, while preserving decentralization and security. For users, developers, and the broader blockchain community, it may well usher in a new era of high-throughput, low-cost decentralized applications built on Ethereum’s base layer.