The Ethereum Foundation just dropped the "Strawmap" (a play on "straw man" and "roadmap"), and it's essentially a massive, decade-defining vision for where the network is headed through 2029.
Rather than a rigid set of rules, it’s a draft framework intended to coordinate developers across seven major hard forks. Here is the breakdown of the "North Stars" and technical shifts they’ve outlined:
The 5 "North Stars"
The Strawmap identifies five core objectives to make Ethereum the "backbone of the digital economy":
Fast L1: Reducing slot times from 12 seconds down to 2 seconds. The goal is "near-instant" finality (shrinking from 16 minutes to roughly 6–16 seconds) using a new consensus mechanism called Minimmit. Gigagas L1: Aiming for a mainnet throughput of 10,000 TPS (transactions per second) by integrating zkEVM directly into the base layer.
Teragas L2: Creating enough data bandwidth (1GB/s) to support Layer 2 networks handling 10 million TPS.
Native Privacy: Introducing "shielded transfers" at the base layer to allow for private ETH transactions without needing third-party mixers.
Quantum-Proofing: Implementing post-quantum cryptography to protect the network against future specialized computing threats. The 2026 Timeline
While the Strawmap looks ahead to 2029, the immediate next steps for this year are:
Glamsterdam (H1 2026): The first major fork under this new model, focusing on initial speed improvements and EIPs for better user experience.
Hegotá (H2 2026): Expected to follow six months later, continuing the push toward faster finality and censorship resistance.
💡 Why "Strawmap"?
The name is intentional. By calling it a "Strawmap," researchers like Justin Drake and Vitalik Buterin are signaling that this is a "straw man" proposal—a starting point for the community to critique, tear apart, and refine. It moves away from the "one big upgrade" model toward a predictable, six-month heartbeat of protocol improvements. $ETH
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.
15 Likes
Reward
15
18
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
ShainingMoon
· 3h ago
LFG 🔥
Reply0
ShainingMoon
· 3h ago
To The Moon 🌕
Reply0
Yunna
· 3h ago
Buy To Earn 💰️
Reply0
Yusfirah
· 6h ago
2026 GOGOGO 👊
Reply0
StylishKuri
· 7h ago
To The Moon 🌕
Reply0
ShizukaKazu
· 8h ago
2026 Go Go Go 👊
View OriginalReply0
LittleGodOfWealthPlutus
· 8h ago
Wishing you good luck in the Year of the Horse and may you prosper and become wealthy😘
#EthereumFoundationUnveilsItsStrawmap
The Ethereum Foundation just dropped the "Strawmap" (a play on "straw man" and "roadmap"), and it's essentially a massive, decade-defining vision for where the network is headed through 2029.
Rather than a rigid set of rules, it’s a draft framework intended to coordinate developers across seven major hard forks. Here is the breakdown of the "North Stars" and technical shifts they’ve outlined:
The 5 "North Stars"
The Strawmap identifies five core objectives to make Ethereum the "backbone of the digital economy":
Fast L1: Reducing slot times from 12 seconds down to 2 seconds. The goal is "near-instant" finality (shrinking from 16 minutes to roughly 6–16 seconds) using a new consensus mechanism called Minimmit.
Gigagas L1: Aiming for a mainnet throughput of 10,000 TPS (transactions per second) by integrating zkEVM directly into the base layer.
Teragas L2: Creating enough data bandwidth (1GB/s) to support Layer 2 networks handling 10 million TPS.
Native Privacy: Introducing "shielded transfers" at the base layer to allow for private ETH transactions without needing third-party mixers.
Quantum-Proofing: Implementing post-quantum cryptography to protect the network against future specialized computing threats.
The 2026 Timeline
While the Strawmap looks ahead to 2029, the immediate next steps for this year are:
Glamsterdam (H1 2026): The first major fork under this new model, focusing on initial speed improvements and EIPs for better user experience.
Hegotá (H2 2026): Expected to follow six months later, continuing the push toward faster finality and censorship resistance.
💡 Why "Strawmap"?
The name is intentional. By calling it a "Strawmap," researchers like Justin Drake and Vitalik Buterin are signaling that this is a "straw man" proposal—a starting point for the community to critique, tear apart, and refine. It moves away from the "one big upgrade" model toward a predictable, six-month heartbeat of protocol improvements.
$ETH