Ethereum's latest technological iteration is about to redefine the entire ecosystem's operational logic. The Glamsterdam fork is officially scheduled for 2026, which means Ethereum will transition from single-thread processing to a true era of parallel computing.
The most immediate change is in throughput. Currently, the Gas limit remains at 60 million, but after the upgrade, it will surge to 200 million—this is not just a numerical increase; it represents a qualitative leap in the underlying architecture's capability. To put it simply: Ethereum used to be like a single-lane highway, where each transaction had to queue; after the upgrade, it will become a multi-lane highway with ten lanes or more, significantly boosting concurrent transaction processing capacity.
What practical impacts does this change have on the ecosystem? First is user experience. The increase in TPS will make on-chain interactions as smooth as Web2 applications, eliminating the wait of three to five minutes for a simple transfer. Second, the ceiling for application innovation is broken open; DApp developers will no longer have to repeatedly compromise due to performance bottlenecks, allowing full creative freedom.
From an external environment perspective, the timing is also quite favorable. The Dubai government has officially announced acceptance of ETH payments, PayPal is fully integrating into the crypto asset ecosystem, and there are rumors that the Euro stablecoin might choose to anchor on Ethereum. Several US states are also promoting relevant tax incentives. All these point in the same direction: a global-scale application has finally waited for a truly capable public chain.
2026 is not that far away. For those paying attention to ecosystem development, now is a critical window for strategic positioning. No matter how you view this upgrade, at least consider this: when the technical bottleneck is truly broken, how high can Ethereum be pushed?
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
6 Likes
Reward
6
4
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
RektButSmiling
· 6h ago
Are you drawing another big pie? Let's wait until 2026. First, let's stay alive.
View OriginalReply0
GateUser-0717ab66
· 6h ago
Ten lanes? Sounds good, but let's wait and see if it can really be fully utilized first, haha.
View OriginalReply0
ExpectationFarmer
· 6h ago
Six lanes? I think it's just science fiction. Let's talk about it two years later.
---
I've seen the Gas cap tripled many times before. The key is whether it can really be implemented.
---
Finally, someone dares to tell the truth. All those Layer2 hype stories are nowhere to be found now.
---
Dubai, PayPal, Euro stablecoins... these news are more and more outrageous, but who can guarantee they'll still be effective next year?
---
Wait, what kind of name is Glamsterdam? That's way too casual haha.
---
If the Gas cap really reaches 200 million, miners' earnings will plummet. Has anyone considered this?
---
Every time they say they want to reshape the ecosystem, it's still the same old faces profiting. I want to see who gets cut this time.
---
Laying out key windows? Listen, that's classic FOMO rhetoric.
---
Six lanes blocked tenfold, right? Then they'll have to release another version.
---
2026 is so far away. Even the demolition office’s promises are more reliable than this.
View OriginalReply0
SilentAlpha
· 6h ago
200 million gas? Damn, time to stock up on ETH again. Let's wait and see if I can copy the bottom.
Ethereum's latest technological iteration is about to redefine the entire ecosystem's operational logic. The Glamsterdam fork is officially scheduled for 2026, which means Ethereum will transition from single-thread processing to a true era of parallel computing.
The most immediate change is in throughput. Currently, the Gas limit remains at 60 million, but after the upgrade, it will surge to 200 million—this is not just a numerical increase; it represents a qualitative leap in the underlying architecture's capability. To put it simply: Ethereum used to be like a single-lane highway, where each transaction had to queue; after the upgrade, it will become a multi-lane highway with ten lanes or more, significantly boosting concurrent transaction processing capacity.
What practical impacts does this change have on the ecosystem? First is user experience. The increase in TPS will make on-chain interactions as smooth as Web2 applications, eliminating the wait of three to five minutes for a simple transfer. Second, the ceiling for application innovation is broken open; DApp developers will no longer have to repeatedly compromise due to performance bottlenecks, allowing full creative freedom.
From an external environment perspective, the timing is also quite favorable. The Dubai government has officially announced acceptance of ETH payments, PayPal is fully integrating into the crypto asset ecosystem, and there are rumors that the Euro stablecoin might choose to anchor on Ethereum. Several US states are also promoting relevant tax incentives. All these point in the same direction: a global-scale application has finally waited for a truly capable public chain.
2026 is not that far away. For those paying attention to ecosystem development, now is a critical window for strategic positioning. No matter how you view this upgrade, at least consider this: when the technical bottleneck is truly broken, how high can Ethereum be pushed?