Spent some time going through all the upgrade information on Fusaka, and it really feels like this update has a lot to offer.
There are three main highlights worth paying attention to in this update: first, there will be a significant improvement in L1 TPS; second, L2 costs can be substantially reduced; and most importantly, it could create more scenarios for ETH burning.
Thinking back, as early as August 2021 during the London upgrade, EIP-1559 had already introduced a burn mechanism to Ethereum. From that point on, ETH had the potential to become deflationary. Now, Fusaka continues to deepen in this direction, and the evolution logic of the entire economic model is still quite clear.
From a technical roadmap perspective, Ethereum has been balancing both performance and economic model over the past few years, and this Fusaka upgrade is another step forward.
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RegenRestorer
· 5h ago
Ha, Fusaka has really taken ETH's deflationary logic to a deeper level with this move. The burn mechanism is being built up step by step—this play is absolutely brilliant.
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CryptoNomics
· 12-06 12:56
actually, if you run the correlation matrix on eth burn mechanics post-eip-1559, the deflationary thesis doesn't hold up quite as cleanly as most people think. endogenous demand dynamics matter way more than the tokenomics headlines suggest.
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ChainMelonWatcher
· 12-05 13:57
This move by Fusaka does look pretty good—the TPS has increased, costs can come down, and most importantly, the burn mechanism is about to be strengthened again.
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ContractExplorer
· 12-05 13:55
This update does look pretty good—TPS, cost, and burn mechanism all being addressed... Feels like Ethereum’s direction is still quite clear.
But honestly, I still need to see the name Fusaka a few more times to get used to it, haha.
Now that deflationary expectations are out, how is the market reacting?
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RunWhenCut
· 12-05 13:47
Burning and deflation sound good, but the real benefits still depend on actual implementation.
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MetaDreamer
· 12-05 13:44
Hmm... The reduction in L2 costs is real, but is the TPS improvement actually effective? Feels like it's just numbers on paper again.
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MeltdownSurvivalist
· 12-05 13:34
Fusaka really hit the nail on the head this time: TPS is up, gas fees are down, and token burns have increased. The economic model is getting more and more competitive.
Spent some time going through all the upgrade information on Fusaka, and it really feels like this update has a lot to offer.
There are three main highlights worth paying attention to in this update: first, there will be a significant improvement in L1 TPS; second, L2 costs can be substantially reduced; and most importantly, it could create more scenarios for ETH burning.
Thinking back, as early as August 2021 during the London upgrade, EIP-1559 had already introduced a burn mechanism to Ethereum. From that point on, ETH had the potential to become deflationary. Now, Fusaka continues to deepen in this direction, and the evolution logic of the entire economic model is still quite clear.
From a technical roadmap perspective, Ethereum has been balancing both performance and economic model over the past few years, and this Fusaka upgrade is another step forward.